Table of Contents

Volume 14, Number 3 · February 12, 1970

Elizabeth Hardwick, The Theater of Grotowski

Henry David Aiken, Yes Men

Academic Freedom and Academic Anarchy by Sidney Hook

The Decline of Radicalism; Reflections on America Today by Daniel J. Boorstin

Noel Annan, Lost Pussies

The Worm in the Bud by Ronald Pearsall

The Empress Brown by Tom Cullen

Ermyntrude and Esmeralda by Lytton Strachey

Leonard Schapiro, What Is Fascism?

The Nature of Fascism edited by S.J. Woolf

Die Deutsche Diktatur Enstehung Struktur Folgen des Nationalsozialismus by Karl Dietrich Bracher

The Limits of Hitler's Power by Edward N. Peterson

The History of the Nazi Party 1919 to 1933 by Dietrich Orlow

Ronald Steel, Commissar of the Cold War

Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department by Dean Acheson

W.S. Merwin, Shine On, Tottering Republic

Christopher Ricks, The Unignorable Real

The Collected Stories by Peter Taylor

Pricksongs & Descants by Robert Coover

them by Joyce Carol Oates

The French Lieutenant's Woman by John Fowles

Jason Epstein, The Chicago Conspiracy Trial: Allen Ginsberg on the Stand

Edmund R. Leach, Bedtime Story

Hamlet's Mill by Giorgio de Santillana, by Hertha von Dechend

Elizabeth Martinez, Edgar Z. Friedenberg, An Exchange on La Raza


Letters

Paul Edwards, Charles Rycroft, Reich's Therapy
Marvin Hoffman, Teachers Newsletter
Reservists Committee to Stop the War, Reservists' Protest
George Kirk, Geoffrey Barraclough, Colonies



Contributors

Noel Annan is the author of Leslie Stephen and Our Age, among other books. (October 1999)

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

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.

W.S. Merwin was born in New York City in 1927 and grew up in Union City, New Jersey, and in Scranton, Pennsylvania. From 1949 to 1951 he worked as a tutor in France, Portugal, and Majorca. He has since lived in many parts of the world, most recently on Maui in the Hawaiian Islands. He is the author of many books of poems, prose, and translations and has received both the Pulitzer and the Bollingen Prizes for poetry, among numerous other awards.

Christopher Ricks is William M. and Sara B. Warren Professor of the Humanities and Co-Director of the Editorial Institute at Boston University, and Professor of Poetry at Oxford. His most recent book is Dylan’s Visions of Sin. (March 2008)

Ronald Steel is Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California, a recent fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, and the author of biographies of Walter Lippmann and Robert Kennedy. (June 2006)


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