Some posters on this board talk about it as if it were a real thing that mattered. But there is no such thing as "cultural Marxism". There was, once, a Frankfurt School of Marxist literary criticism, but it had no influence on the Civil Rights movement, the anti-Vietnam-War movement, the sexual revolution, the gay rights movement, Critical Race Theory, or anything else that has changed American or any other Western culture since the 1950s. It might have had some influence on the New Left -- but the New Left had no political successes, and has long since faded from the scene.
Cultural Marxism is a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory which claims that Western Marxism is the basis of continuing academic and intellectual efforts to subvert Western culture.[1][2][3] The theory claims that an elite of Marxist theorists and Frankfurt School intellectuals are subverting Western society with a culture war that undermines the Christian values of traditionalist conservatism and promotes the cultural liberal values of the 1960s counterculture and multiculturalism, progressive politics and political correctness, misrepresented as identity politics created by critical theory.[2][3][4]
A contemporary revival of the Nazi propaganda term "Cultural Bolshevism",[5] the conspiracy theory originated in the United States during the 1990s.[6][7]: Abstract While originally found only on the far-right political fringe, the term began to enter mainstream discourse in the 2010s and is now found globally.[7] The conspiracy theory of a Marxist culture war is promoted by right-wing politicians, fundamentalist religious leaders, political commentators in mainstream print and television media, and white supremacist terrorists.[8] Scholarly analysis of the conspiracy theory has concluded that it has no basis in fact.[7][9]
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