Table of Contents

Volume 8, Number 7 · April 20, 1967

Stuart Hampshire, The Education of Bertrand Russell

The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell by Bertrand Russell

Stephen Spender, Bagatelles (poem)

Mary McCarthy, Report from Vietnam I. The Home Program

Elizabeth Hardwick, Blow-Up

The Death of a President by William Manchester

V.S. Pritchett, Troubadour

The Novels of Flaubert: A Study of Themes and Techniques by Victor Brombert

Intimate Notebook 1840-1841 by Gustave Flaubert, translated by Francis Steegmuller

November by Gustave Flaubert, translated by Frank Jellinek, edited by Francis Steegmuller

The Dictionary of Accepted Ideas by Gustave Flaubert, translated by Jacques Barzun

John Thompson, Catching Up on Mailer

Cannibals and Christians by Norman Mailer

The Deer Park A Play by Norman Mailer

Jason Epstein, The CIA and the Intellectuals

G.M. Matthews, Dredging for Shelley

The Mutiny Within: The Heresies of Percy Bysshe Shelley by James Rieger

Walter Laqueur, The Risks of Prophecy

Ironies of History by Isaac Deutscher

Paul Goodman, A Non-Registrant (poem)

Victor F. Weisskopf, On Niels Bohr

Niels Bohr: The Man, His Science, and the World They Changed by Ruth Moore

The Questioners: Physicists and the Quantum Theory by Barbara Lovett Cline

Thirty Years that Shook Physics by George Gamow


Letters

Raziel Abelson, The Responsibility of Intellectuals
Fryar Calhoun, The Responsibility of Intellectuals
E.B. Murray, The Responsibility of Intellectuals
Arthur Dorfman, Noam Chomsky, The Responsibility of Intellectuals



Contributors

Jason Epstein was for many years editorial director of Random House and has written on food for various publications. (March 2008)

Stuart Hampshire, formerly Warden of Wardham College, Oxford, is the author of Spinoza and Justice Is Conflict.(October 2002)

Elizabeth Hardwick (b. 1916) has been a frequent contributor to The Partisan Review, The New Yorker, and The New York Review of Books, which she helped found in 1963. Her books include the novels The Simple Truth, The Ghostly Lover, and Sleepless Nights, the essay collection A View of My Own, and The Selected Letters of William James, for which she acted as editor.

Mary McCarthy (1912-1989) was a novelist, essayist, and critic. Her political and social commentary, literary essays, and drama criticism appeared in magazines such as Partisan Review, The New Yorker, Harper's, and The New York Review of Books, and were collected in On the Contrary (1961), Mary McCarthy's Theatre Chronicles 1937-1962 (1963), The Writing on the Wall (1970), Ideas and the Novel (1980), and Occasional Prose (1985). Her novels include The Company She Keeps (1942), The Oasis (1949), The Groves of Academe (1952), A Charmed Life (1955), The Group (1963), Birds of America (1971), and Cannibals and Missionaries (1971). She was the author of three works of autobiography, Memories of a Catholic Girlhood (1957), How I Grew (1987), and the unfinished Intellectual Memoirs (1992), and two travel books about Italy, Venice Observed (1956) and The Stones of Florence (1959). Her essays on the Vietnam War were collected in The Seventeenth Degree (1974); her essays on Watergate were collected in The Mask of State (1974).


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