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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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International Relations
February 27, 1965
Magazine
Edgar Snow
Interview with Mao
In a rare interview, Mao Tse-Tung conversed on topics ranging over what he himself called shan nan hai pei, or “from south of the mountains to north of the seas.”
September 24, 1945
George Soule
The British-American Difference
October 21, 1940
Subscribers Only
Virginia Woolf
Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid
Subscribers Only
May 2, 1934
Magazine
The New Republic
Exit, Versailles
Of all the issues raised by Germany’s National Socialist movement, its promise to scrap the Versailles Treaty has probably appealed more strongly to the Germans than any other.
April 20, 1921
Magazine
The New Republic
How Liberalism Can Avoid Futility
When Liberalism argues for an intensification of American aloofness, it sinks only deeper into futility.
June 7, 1919
Magazine
Walter E. Weyl
Woodrow Wilson, Prophet and Politician
When President Wilson surrendered the role of prophet and accepted the lesser role of opportunist politician—he became as one of the others, a little less than the others.
September 1, 1917
Magazine
John Dewey
Conscription of Thought
Absence of thought is the chief enemy to freedom of mind.
July 28, 1917
Subscribers Only
Magazine
John Dewey
The Future of Pacifism
The future of the profound American desire for peace is a topic which is intimately connected with the war itself.
Subscribers Only
September 4, 1915
Magazine
Randolph Bourne
American Use for German Ideals
I do not say that we did wrong in repudiating the German ideals, I only want to know what our repudiation means. It seemed intuitive rather than deliberate.
January 16, 1915
Magazine
Randolph Bourne
Continental Cultures
American opinion, in its anxiety to find who struck the match that started the blaze of war, has tended to ignore the nature and quantity of the fuel.
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