Table of Contents

Volume 8, Number 2 · February 9, 1967

Erik H. Erikson, The Strange Case of Freud, Bullitt, and Woodrow Wilson: I

Thomas Woodrow Wilson: Twenty-eighth President of the United States—A Psychological Study by Sigmund Freud, by William C. Bullitt

Richard Hofstadter, The Strange Case: II

Edward Field, The Bride of Frankenstein (poem)

W.H. Auden, Mr. G

Goethe: Conversations and Encounters Edited and translated by David Luke and Robert Pick

Bernard B. Fall, The View from Vietnam

SOE in France by M.R.D. Foot

Vietnam in the Mud by James Pickerell

Vietnam! Vietnam! by Felix Greene

Vietcong: The Organization and Techniques of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam by Douglas Pike

The Politics of Escalation in Vietnam by Franz Schurmann

Vietnam Seen from East and West edited by Sibnarayan Ray

Matthew Hodgart, A New Catholic Bible

The Jerusalem Bible edited by The Reverend Alexander Jones

John H. Schaar, Sheldon S. Wolin, Berkeley and the University Revolution

Jack H. Hexter, The One That Got Away

The Foundation of Historical Knowledge by Morton White

Analytical Philosophy of History by Arthur C. Danto

Bernard Bergonzi, Updike, Dennis, and Others

The Music School by John Updike

A House in Order by Nigel Dennis

La Chamade by Françoise Sagan

Any God Will Do by Richard Condon


Letters

Stephen Newman, Dwight MacDonald, Macdonald's Macbird
Peter Shaw, Nabokov
Stephen Goldfarb, Bargain
Walter Harding, MLA Edition
Dorothea Tanning, D.J. Enright, Nabokov
Donald Hoffmann, Too Perfect
Barbara S. Meeker, Not Human



Contributors

W. H. Auden (1907–1973) was born in North Yorkshire, England, the son of a doctor. He studied at Oxford and published his first book, Poems, in 1930, immediately establishing himself as one of the outstanding voices of his generation. Auden emigrated to New York in 1939, where he became a US citizen and converted to Anglicanism. He wrote essays, critical studies, plays, and opera librettos for such composers as Benjamin Britten, Igor Stravinsky, and Hans Werner Henze, as well as the poems for which he is most famous.


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