Solutions to problems often carry unanticipated consequences. This is the case with part-time work in America today. Part-time work can be a reasonable way of dealing with the work-family dilemma. It has been discussed widely in the press, among corporate …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    The Red Atlantis: Communist Culture in Absence of Communism by J. Hoberman Temple University Press, 1999, 304 pp., $34.95 Joe Wood had a voice as deep as a doublebass, and he spoke as he wrote: low, slowly, softly. He forced …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Rational Exuberance: The Influence of Generation X On the New American Economy by Meredith Bagby E.P. Dutton, 1998, 274 pp., $24.95 I have before me a book on the political economy of Generation X that resembles nothing so much as …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    The financial crisis that erupted in east Asia in mid 1997 has thrust millions of workers back into dire poverty and shattered an entire decade of economic development in the region. The crisis has also flared and spread within the …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    The end of Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial was a signal to the nation’s varsity pundits—time to begin overall evaluations of l’affaire Monica. The award for “most lugubrious wrap-up” goes to David Gergen. Speaking on a panel aired by C-SPAN, Gergen …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Andre Gide: A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan Harvard University Press, 1999, 634 pp., $35 One of the hardest tasks of André Gide’s long life was a translation of Hamlet, which he completed in 1942 after twenty years …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    I think that I am in favor of the fourth way, or maybe the fifth; anyway, I am sure there is a “way” coming that will be better than all the others. The advantage of four and five is that …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Since the late 1970s, feminist theorists and scholars have been attacking, subverting, and attempting to dethrone the universalist liberalism of earlier women’s-rights advocates who spoke in the name of a unified, homogeneous womankind. From that point on, the dominant motif …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Even if Augusto Pinochet eventually escapes trial for the widespread torture and terrorism that characterized his regime in Chile (1973-1991), the efforts to bring him to justice in Spain (and lately France, Switzerland, and Belgium) mark a pivotal moment in …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Kosovo is where the final disintegration of Yugoslavia began. It is there that the Titoist settlement of the national question in Yugoslavia broke down irreparably in 1990. The immediate issue was the decision of Slobodan Milosevic, the leader of Serbia, …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Bob Chase, the president of the National Education Association, recently declared that its members should “move beyond ideology” and “Politics must stop at the school door.” As I daily try to weave my way through the politics of schooling in …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Italians have been talking about the third way for thirty years, from our first center-left government in the early 1960s to the collapse of communism. But we spoke of a different kind from today’s: it was a third way between …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    In Britain, the intellectual credibility of the third way is at its lowest ebb since the election of May 1997. Many commentators now declare that reality is catching up with a flawed idea. Harsher critics dismiss the suggestion that there …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Atlantic Crossings: Social Politics in a Progressive Age by Daniel Rodgers Harvard University Press, 1998, 508 pp., $35 It is one of the oldest and most cherished of American conceits that the United States of America possesses a unique and …
  
    
    
  
  
  
    Globalism has become the buzzword of American political elites. It symbolizes wildly free markets in every corner of the world and in every aspect of economic life—trade, foreign investment, finance, and even labor. Among both Democrats and Republicans, the battle …