Men of Destiny (Ppr)

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Transaction Publishers, 2003 M04 30 - 244 páginas


A great editorial commentator of the twentieth century, Walter Lippmann, was a major contributor to the central periodicals and journals of the age, including the Atlantic Monthly, Foreign Affairs, Harper's, the New Republic, Saturday Review, and Yale Review. Men of Destiny, a set of biographical essays on leading figures of Lippmann's day, is arguably the best single source for understanding the persons and the policies of the post-World War I period.

In a series of vignettes, the reader is introduced into the lively world of Al Smith, Calvin Coolidge, William Jennings Bryan, H.L. Mencken, Sinclair Lewis, Warren Harding, Andrew Mellon, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. The collection offers a rare glimpse of the first truly modern generation of American politics and society, and also a type of serious, detached writing that presumes a literate audience, but also one not given over to bias and hostility.

The magic of this volume, however, is not in its litany of figures great and small, but Lippmann's comprehensive understanding of the place of America in world affairs. His essay on American imperialism remains a classic: "All the world thinks of the United States today as an empire, except the people of the United States." His advice to Americans is not to continue being evasive and grandiose with the rhetoric of equality, but to recognize the changing conditions and get on with the task of rule in as honorable a state as is possible by a holder of power.

In his perceptive essays on the League of Nations, the efforts to outlaw war through international law, debt and reparations policies, Lippmann appeals to "time and a sense of reality" in examining all matters political. This volume, graced with a new introduction by Paul Roazen, will enable readers now well into the first decade of a new millennium to do just that.

Walter Lippmann authored at least two dozen books on political thought and was America's most distinguished syndicated columnist. This is the tenth work in a continuing effort by Transaction to publish Lippmann's major works.

Paul Roazen is professor emeritus of social and political science at York University in Toronto. He is the author of The Historiography of Psychoanalysis; Freud: Political and Social Thought; Helen Deutsch: A Psychoanalyst's Life, all published by Transaction.

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Contenido

A MAN OF DESTINY
1
PURITANISM DE LUXE
10
THE CAUSES OF POLITICAL INDIFFERENCE TODAY
18
THE CATHOLICISM OF AL SMITH
35
RULE
45
H L MENCKEN
61
SINCLAIR LEWIS
71
THE NATURE OF THE BATTLE OVER CENSORSHIP
93
WILSON AND HOUSE
120
BORAH
140
THE OUTLAWRY OF WAR
162
THE GREATNESS OF MR MELLON
184
VESTED RIGHTS AND NATIONALISM IN LATINAMERICA
196
THE DAYS OF OUR NONAGE ARE OVER
215
SECOND BEST STATESMEN
223
TO JUSTICE HOLMES ON HIS SEVENTY FIFTH BIRTHDAY
242

AN EARLY ESTIMATE OF MR McADOO
112

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Página 94 - That principle is that the sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number is self-protection.
Página 12 - Mr. Coolidge's genius for inactivity is developed to a very high point. It is far from being an indolent inactivity. It is a grim, determined, alert inactivity which keeps Mr. Coolidge occupied constantly.
Página 152 - Accurate and comprehensive knowledge of foreign politics; a steady and systematic adherence to the same views; a nice and uniform sensibility to national character, decision, secrecy and dispatch; are incompatible with the genius of a body so variable and so numerous.
Página 94 - By liberty I mean the assurance that every man shall be protected in doing what he believes his duty against the influence of authority and majorities, custom and opinion.
Página 158 - East that whatever occasion arose appropriate action of the Government of the United States, in conjunction with Japan and Great Britain, for such a purpose could be counted on by them quite as confidently as if the United States were under treaty obligations to take [it].
Página 58 - ... society" wished them to have power; they were enfranchised because they had power, and giving them the vote was the least disturbing way of letting them exercise their power. For the principle of majority rule is the mildest form in which the force of numbers can be exercised. It is a pacific substitute for civil war in which the opposing armies are counted and the victory is awarded to the larger before any blood is shed. Except in the sacred tests of democracy and in the incantations of the...
Página 151 - Thus we see that the Constitution provides that our negotiations for treaties shall have every advantage which can be derived from talents, information, integrity, and deliberate investigations, on the one hand, and from secrecy and dispatch on the other.

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