Platoon: Of Heroes and Demons  

“I keep thinking,” Michael Herr writes in Dispatches, “about all the kids who got wiped out by seventeen years of war movies before coming to Vietnam to get wiped out for good. . . . We’d all seen too many …



Portrait of the Young Lukács  

Georg Lukács liked to say that Marxism is the Himalayas of thought. But, he warned, a hare atop the Himalayas ought not to imagine himself taller than an elephant in the valley below. The most fertile Marxist mind of our …







In the Magazines  

The U.S. news media, which seem to take their intellectual inspiration from People magazine, have focused almost exclusively on Corazon Aquino in their coverage of the Philippines. But though her ascension to the presidency really was a wonderful event, the …





The Myth of Revolution  

This spring my book Politics and the Novel was reissued in paperback by New American Library. The publisher asked me to “bring it up to date” by discussing, however briefly, political fiction written since the Second World War. A formidable …





Unemployment in Advanced Capitalism  

For much of the post-World War II period, the United States routinely had rates of unemployment higher than those in Western Europe. This pattern has been reversed in the 1980s; in 1984, the U.S. suffered with 7.4 percent unemployment: hardly …







They Were in Exile—and Needed Help  

There have been millions upon millions of refugees. Most of them have received considerable media attention, even where concrete support (food, decent living conditions) was meager and inadequate. One group of refugees, perhaps because they “merely” numbered in the tens …





Castro’s Cuba: Lost Illusions  

How times have changed. Many years ago Marx and Engels concluded their Manifesto with the defiant affirmation: “The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be attained. . . ” But now, …