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June 18, 2013: [Summit][Pragmatism][Brazil][Zombies]
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Books

Books — From the February 1984 issue

Berlin’s Mauerkrankheit

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For some Berliners the Wall has become an obsession

By Suzanne Gordon

Books — From the January 1984 issue

The blind side of the heart

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Two Irish novels of seduction and betrayal

By Rhoda Koenig

Books — From the December 1983 issue

Witness at El Playón

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Photography from El Salvador’s heart of darkness

By Robert Stone

Books — From the December 1983 issue

Tumult of the limbs

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Is it true the bourgeoisie had more fun?

By Hugh Kenner

Books — From the November 1983 issue

Biting the invisible hand

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Lester Thurow and four economic theories in search of reality

By James Tobin

Books — From the November 1983 issue

Dark dark dark

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Heavy weather in Joseph Conrad’s letters

By Marvin Mudrick

Books — From the October 1983 issue

Dictated but not read

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It’s wonderful being William Buckley, but it doesn’t leave you time to write

By Rhoda Koenig

Books — From the October 1983 issue

Fort Bragg’s Mr. Hyde

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One night, wholesome, hardworking Capt. Jeffrey MacDonald turned into a murderer

By Robert Stone

Books — From the September 1983 issue

Stalking Dr. Kissinger

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Seymour Hersh collected a mountain of damning evidence, but he let his man escape

By Garry Wills

Books — From the September 1983 issue

Poetize or bust

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Poetry isn’t what it used to be, but then it never was

By Hugh Kenner

Books — From the July 1983 issue

Lives of the saints

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All celibate, vegetarian, utopian pacifists are not alike–cf., Tolstoy and Gandhi

By Marvin Mudrick

Books — From the June 1983 issue

Advanced sociobiology

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The latest fashions in thinking about your genes

By James L. Gould, Carol Grant Gould

Books — From the June 1983 issue

The policy peddlers

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The Kennedy School of Government versus the Harvard Business School on how to save the economy

By Robert J. Samuelson

Books — From the May 1983 issue

Wisdom of the tribe

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Why proverbs are better than aphorisms

By Hugh Kenner

Books — From the April 1983 issue

The landscape of Alberto Moravia

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He used the techniques of the nineteenth-century novel to expose the twentieth-century disease

By Stanley Kauffmann

Books — From the March 1983 issue

Post-feminist fantasies

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Recent scholarship is creating new myths about men and women

By Paul A. Robinson

Books — From the March 1983 issue

African queen

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Isak Dinesen merged her life and art into a romantic melodrama

By Judith Rascoe

Books — From the March 1983 issue

This review is about what

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It’s about three pages and 518 hairs

By Hugh Kenner

Books — From the February 1983 issue

Working-class savior

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The man who believed socialism was “merely Christianity in action”

By Jack Beatty

Books — From the February 1983 issue

Nuclear bookshelf

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A spring bouquet of books about the unthinkable

By Michael Eliot Howard

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[Editor's Note]
Introducing the July 2013 Issue of Harper’s Magazine
A global-warming get-rich-quick scheme, a magic-mushroom murder,
and more
By Harper’s Magazine
[Report]
Glaciers for Sale

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By McKenzie Funk
“Water is the medium of climate change — the ice that melts, the seas that rise. It is also an early indicator of how humanity may respond to climate change: by financializing it.”
Photograph (detail) by Aaron Huey
[Harper's Finest]
The Coming Ice Age

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By Betty Friedan
“How a rising of the ocean waters may flood most of our port cities within the foreseeable future . . .”
“The Glacier of Sermitsialik” (1872)
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What the Young Man Should Know

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From the March 1933 issue
By Robert Littell
“I submit that he who cannot do these things is not completely educated.”
Illustration by Elizabeth Shippen Green (1902)
[Folio]
Blood Spore

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By Hamilton Morris
“The strange timing of Pollock’s murder begot paranoia of all shades and textures . . .”
Photograph by Paul Stamets

Ratio of the number of cicada eggs per square mile of southern New Jersey to the number of stars in the Milky Way:

4:5

AUGUST 2004 > SEARCH >

Jeffrey Lockwood, University of Wyoming (Laramie)/American Museum of Natural History (N.Y.C.)

A Singaporean company unveiled Kissenger, a pair of plastic lips mounted on a large plastic egg, which transmits real-time interactive kisses to a distant lover. “I am not interested in the sexual uses for it,” said the device’s inventor. “We’ve taken several steps to minimize the creepiness.”

OCTOBER 2012 > SEARCH >

The practice of sexualized eyeball licking was causing conjunctivitis in Japanese sixth graders.

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The Coming Ice Age

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