Toward A Radical Middle: Fourteen Pieces of Reporting and Criticism

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These fourteen pieces, all of them written between 1962 and 1968 by one of the most penetrating of the new generation of The New Yorker journalists, cover a staggering variety of subjects: among them the Selma March, teen-age waifs on the Sunset Strip, group therapy, peace groups, book reviews, and essays. - Introduction - The March for Non-Violence from Selma - Salt into Old Scars - Fly Trans-Love Airways - Sartre, Saint Genet and the Bureaucrat - The New Sound, Circa - Polemic and the New Reviewers - Early Radicalism: The Price of Peace Is Confusion - Instruments - Selling an Enraged Bread Pudding - The Black Power March in Mississippi - Conversations - The Thursday Group - Letter from the Six-Day War - Radicalism in Debacle: The Palmer House

Author(s): Renata Adler
Publisher: Random House
Year: 1970

Language: English
Tags: anthology, The New Yorker, politics, war, civil rights, radical centrism, Selma March, group therapy, book reviews, Sunset Strip