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Seller's Description:
Simon & Schuster, 1964. Good., Hardcover, Octavo, 480. Text clean. No dust jacket. Red marker line on bottom edge. 480 pages. Packed and shipped with care.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. 1964. Hardcover. "Includes indexes. Commissioning organisation: edited by Robert B. Luce; commentary by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. 480 p. ill., ports. 24 cm. Associated Names: Luce, Robert B. Associated Names: Schlesinger, Arthur Meier, . Associated Dates: 1917-. Boards with cloth spine. Very good clean and tight copy." Keywords: Subjects. Not a first edition copy.....We ship daily from our warehouse.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. 8vo. First Edition, First Printing; dj w/chipping, clipped price, in mylar; 480 clean, unmarked pages...Commentary By Arthur M. Schlesinger.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Near Fine jacket. First edition. Commentary by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. Fine in a near fine dustwrapper with a small burn mark on the front spinal fold.
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Seller's Description:
Near Fine in Very Good jacket. First edition. Commentary by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. Small quarto. 480pp. Illustrated. Remainder mark on the foredge, a bit of rubbing and bumping on the binding, near fine in a toned, very good or better dust jacket with a small tear on the front cover and a bit of rubbing and bumping along the edges.
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Seller's Description:
Good. No dust jacket issued. [4], 480, [4] pages. Introduction to each decade by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. Preface by Gilbert A. Harrison. Name in ink inside the front cover. Cover has some wear and soiling. Among the contributors are: Francis Biddle, Bruce Bliven, Van Wyck Brooks, Heywood Broun, Marquis Childs, Alistair Cooke, R. H.S. Crossman, John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Felix Frankfurter, Robert Graves, Louis Halle, Irving Howe, Langston Hughes, Harold Ickes, Maynard Keynes, Walter Lippmann, Mary McCarthy, H. L. Mencken, Henry Miller, Malcolm Muggeridge, Lewis Mumford, John O'Hara, Margaret Sanger, George Bernard Shaw, Vincent Sheean, C. O. Snow, John Steinbeck, Adlai Stevenson, Lionel Trilling, Leon Trotsky, John Updike, Henry Wallace, Rebecca West, Edmund Wilson, and Thomas Wolfe. The New Republic is an American magazine of commentary on politics, contemporary culture, and the arts. Founded in 1914 by several leaders of the progressive movement, it attempted to find a balance between "a liberalism centered in humanitarian and moral passion and one based in an ethos of scientific analysis". Through the 1980s and 1990s, the magazine incorporated elements of the Third Way and conservatism. In 2014, two years after Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes purchased the magazine, he ousted its editor and attempted to remake its format, operations, and partisan stances, provoking the resignation of the majority of its editors and writers. In early 2016, Hughes announced he was putting the magazine up for sale, indicating the need for "new vision and leadership". The magazine was sold in February 2016 to Win McCormack, under whom the publication has returned to a more progressive stance. A weekly or near-weekly for most of its history, the magazine currently publishes ten issues per year. The New Republic was founded by Herbert Croly, Walter Lippmann, and Walter Weyl through the financial backing of heiress Dorothy Payne Whitney and her husband, Willard Straight, who maintained majority ownership. The magazine's first issue was published on November 7, 1914. The magazine's politics were liberal and progressive, and as such concerned with coping with the great changes brought about by middle-class reform efforts designed to remedy the weaknesses in America's changing economy and society. The magazine is widely considered important in changing the character of liberalism in the direction of governmental interventionism, both foreign and domestic. The most important of them was the emergence of the U.S. as a great power on the international scene. In 1917, TNR urged America's entry into the Great War on the side of the Allies. One consequence of the war was the Russian Revolution of 1917. During the interwar years, the magazine was generally positive in its assessment of the Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin. However, the magazine changed its position after the Cold War began in 1947, and in 1948, its leftist editor, Henry A. Wallace, departed to run for president on the Progressive ticket. After Wallace, the magazine moved toward positions more typical of mainstream American liberalism. Throughout the 1950s, the publication was critical of both Soviet foreign policy and domestic anticommunism, particularly McCarthyism. During the 1960s, the magazine opposed the Vietnam War but also often criticized the New Left. Until the late 1960s, the magazine had a certain "cachet as the voice of re-invigorated liberalism, " in the opinion of the commentator Eric Alterman, who has criticized the magazine's politics from the left. That cachet, Alterman wrote, "was perhaps best illustrated when the dashing, young President Kennedy had been photographed boarding Air Force One holding a copy."