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A Voice Still Heard

Selected Essays of Irving Howe

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An indispensable collection of one of America's most outspoken and original critics of the second half of the twentieth century
Man of letters, political critic, public intellectual, Irving Howe was one of America's most exemplary and embattled writers. Since his death in 1993 at age 72, Howe's work and his personal example of commitment to high principle, both literary and political, have had a vigorous afterlife. This posthumous and capacious collection includes twenty-six essays that originally appeared in such publications as the New York Review of Books, the New Republic, and the Nation. Taken together, they reveal the depth and breadth of Howe's enthusiasms and range over politics, literature, Judaism, and the tumults of American society.

A Voice Still Heard is essential to the understanding of the passionate and skeptical spirit of this lucid writer. The book forms a bridge between the two parallel enterprises of culture and politics. It shows how politics justifies itself by culture, and how the latter prompts the former. Howe's voice is ever sharp, relentless, often scathingly funny, revealing Howe as that rarest of critics—a real reader and writer, one whose clarity of style is a result of his disciplined and candid mind.

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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2014
      Prescient and passionate critiques of American politics and culture from one of the 20th century's most important critics. "How shall we live?" Howe (1920-1993) asked in an essay published in 1971; "this question has obsessed thoughtful people throughout the modern era...and it has obsessed them with increasing anxiety and intensity." It is the question that informs many essays in this collection, judiciously selected by Howe's daughter. For more than 40 years, Howe's essays on politics, society and literature appeared in a variety of publications and established his reputation as one of the most prominent intellectuals of his time. In 1954, he founded Dissent: "When intellectuals can do nothing else, they start a magazine," he remarked. "But starting a magazine is also doing something: at the very least it is thinking in common." As an American socialist, he acknowledged that he stood "precariously on the margin of our politics." He was frustrated that Americans refused to understand socialism's essential commandment: "the participation of the workers...as self-conscious men preparing to enter the arena of history" by playing a role in public life. Howe disparaged liberals' ineffectual hand-wringing and predilection to conform. Liberalism, he believed, "bleaches all political tendencies." In the 1970s, he worried that higher education was in serious trouble: "When a society does not know what it wishes its young to know, it is suffering from moral and spiritual incoherence." In a scathing critique of Reaganism that Howe wrote in 1986, he noted, "[w]hen lined with religious passion and cast as an agent of traditional values, right-wing politics takes on a formidable strength." Problems he identified as urgent still persist, including "the inequities of our economic arrangements, the maldistribution of our income and wealth, the undemocratic nature of our corporate structures." This important collection allows a new generation of readers to hear Howe's uncompromising voice.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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