Table of Contents

Volume 32, Number 4 · March 14, 1985

Robert Brustein, Living Theater

The Theater of Essence by Jan Kott

Diane Johnson, Conspirators

White Noise by Don DeLillo

Janet Malcolm, The Unreliable Genius

Edmund Gosse: A Literary Landscape, 1849–1928 by Ann Thwaite

John Keegan, Newspook

Too Secret Too Long by Chapman Pincher

Graham Hughes, We Try Harder

Tightening the Reins of Justice in America: A Comparative Analysis of the Criminal Jury Trial in England and the United States by Michael H. Graham

Richard Ellmann, Heaney Agonistes

Station Island by Seamus Heaney

David Ablin, Marlowe Hood, Norodom Sihanouk, 'The Lesser Evil': An Interview with Norodom Sihanouk

Gabriele Annan, Give Him a Break!

Aracoeli by Elsa Morante, translated by William Weaver

Quentin Skinner, Ms. Machiavelli

Fortune Is a Woman by Hanna Fenichel Pitkin

Murray Kempton, Misjudgment at Atlanta

The Atlanta Child Murders written and coproduced for CBS television by Abby Mann

Paul Kennedy, The Reasons Why

The Origins of the First World War by James Joll

Israel Rosenfield, The New Brain

The Broken Brain: The Biological Revolution in Psychiatry by Nancy C. Andreasen MD, Ph.D.

Brain, Mind, and Behavior by Floyd E. Bloom, by Arlyne Lazerson, by Laura Hofstadter

The Amazing Brain by Robert Ornstein, by Richard F. Thompson, illustrated by David Macaulay

The Brain by Richard M. Restak MD

The Brain a documentary series produced by WNET/Thirteen (New York)


Letters

Charles Biblowit, Adrian DeWind, et al. Crackdown in Yugoslavia
Robert L. Patterson, Wells and Women
Anthony West, Brigid Brophy, Wells and Women
Edward Erwin, Jonathan Lieberson, Freud's Fate
John Pope-Hennessy, The Right B.B.



Contributors

Gabriele Annan is a book and film critic living in London. (March 2006)

Diane Johnson is the author, most recently, of Into a Paris Quartier: Reine Margot’s Chapel and Other Haunts of St. Germain. Her latest novel is L’Affaire. (February 2008)

Murray Kempton (1917-1997) was a columnist for Newsday, as well as a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books. His books include Rebellions, Perversities, and Main Events and The Briar Patch, as well as Part of Our Time. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985.

Paul Kennedy, the J. Richardson Dilworth Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies at Yale, is the author and editor of fifteen books, including The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. His latest book is The Parliament of Man: The Past, Present, and Future of the United Nations. (November 2006)

Janet Malcolm was born in Prague. She was educated at the High School of Music and Art, in New York, and at the University of Michigan. Along with In the Freud Archives, her books include Diana and Nikon: Essays on Photography, Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession, The Journalist and the Murderer, The Purloined Clinic: Selected Writings, The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, The Crime of Sheila McGough, and Reading Chekhov: A Critical Journey. She lives in New York with her husband, Gardner Botsford.

Israel Rosenfield's most recent book is Freud's Megalomania. (June 2008)

Quentin Skinner is Regius Professor of History at Cambridge University. His most recent books are Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes and Liberty Before Liberalism. (November 2000)


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