Partisan Review

Partisan Review was an American political and literary quarterly published from 1934 to 2003. It was founded by William Phillips and Philip Rahv. It grew out of the John Reed Club as an alternative to New Masses, the publication of the American Communist Party, but became virulently anti-Communist after Stalin. Many of its early authors were Jewish immigrants from Europe. The journal reached its peak influence from the late 1930s to the early 1960s, but then gradually lost its relevance to modern American culture. Phillips died in September 2002 at age 94. The journal continued under his wife Edith Kurzweil until it ceased publication in April 2003. Partisan Review awarded George Orwell 357 for the year's most significant contribution to literature, Nineteen Eighty-Four. Classic stories and articles first published in Partisan Review:

External links

  • http://slate.msn.com/id/2081610
  • http://chronicle.com/free/2003/04/2003041603n.htm
* Partisan Review online Archive 1996–2003

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the grand duchy of jeuno
chthonian planet
list of indonesian composers
nicholas gilman
apple filing protocol
vivi
john leverett
margaret laurence
yf 23 black widow ii
internal capsule
jared ingersoll
list of places named for dewitt clinton
yield curve
multidisciplinary design optimization
the present and the past
use def chain
fixed income
hugo award for best fan writer
australian comedians on television
reform act 1867
mindolluin
eugen, archduke of austria
mklinux
tanichthys micagemmae
popish plot
jane jensen
robert holmes
common subexpression elimination
bear mountain state park
law of small numbers
lockheed yf 12
silpakorn university
pebkac
saitama university
global value numbering
watkins glen state park
hamlin beach state park
prince leopold of bavaria
devil's hole state park
destination moon
sasin graduate institute of business administration, chulalongkorn university
les barker
kellogg school of management
keuka lake state park