Whatever Happened to Romantic Love?  

In his Three Essays on Sexuality, Freud summed up the views of two diverse cultures on love, his own and that of the ancient Greeks: The most striking distinction between the erotic life of antiquity and our own no doubt …



Letters  

Editors: The articles by Philip Green are long, and heavily documented, but Mr. Green seems not to have decided whether he is writing facts or polemics. As there are too many points of controversy to go into all of them, …



The Return of Victor Serge  

In The Case of Comrade Tulayev, Victor Serge’s novel of the Great Purge, one character says as he fears he is about to be arrested: Listen. . . . There are not more than fifty men on earth who understand …



Varieties of New History  

The Revolutionary Ascetic: Evolution of a Political Type, by Bruce Mazlish. New York: Basic Books. 261 pp. Work, Culture, and Society in Industrializing America, by Herbert G. Gutman. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 343 pp. Recoiling from the lack of …



Two Notes from India  

Although the winds of compulsory sterilization are blowing over many parts of the country, in Bihar State this extreme measure has been advised against for the present. The major reason is that medical facilities in the rural areas of Bihar are …



The Myth of Mao  

Some misunderstandings do acquire historical dimensions. In the celebrated interview he granted Edgar Snow, Mao Tsetung allegedly described himself as “a lonely monk walking in the rain under a leaking umbrella.” With its mixture of humorous humility and exoticism, this …



Human Rights as Property Rights  

In these days, when we are all becoming more concerned about the way we are using up our natural resources, polluting our environment, and destroying the ecological balance of nature, it still seems to some that there is an insuperable …



The Election: Lessons & Rewards?  

After Vietnam and Watergate, years of racial conflict, sad stories of apathy, party disintegration, the breakup of traditional alliances, media domination, the United States has had its most conventional, its most “normal” election since 1960, perhaps since 1944. I confess …







A Prisoner in Mrs. Gandhi’s India  

George Fernandes, chairman of the Socialist party of India and leader of India’s railroad workers’ federation, faces trial in that country on the charge of “planned sabotage” and acting against the interest of India. Here is the text of a …



Was Weimar Necessary?  

Ideologists tend to see the future in terms of the past. The pioneers of the Great French Revolution paraded as Brutuses. The Bolsheviks in turn imitated the Jacobins, hoping to improve on their predecessors’ performance while escaping their fate. Now …



Candide’s Legacy  

The Awareness Trap: Self-Absorption Instead of Social Change, by Edwin Schur. New York: Quadrangle Books. 213 pp. According to the revisionists, Candide decided to cultivate his own garden when he and his companions reached California. He gave himself wholly to that …



What Socialism Is and Is Not  

Socialists are at a minimum committed to economic planning that goes counter to the operation of an economy in which private firms predominate and profits are distributed among shareholders and managers. A system of this kind necessarily perpetuates the class …



The Gut Issues in the Election  

All commentators seem to agree that the recent election was the most clear-cut representation of a party vote in a long time, and that the social composition of party allegiance more closely resembled the Roosevelt era than anything since. In …