Search
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in excerpt
Lọc theo loại bài đăng
Search in posts
Search in pages

Editorials from The Dial magazine, Volume 66 Audiobook

Rate this audiobook
06/07/2024
Editorials from The Dial magazine, Volume 66 cover
Author:
Genre:
Chapter:
75
Listen: 6

Editorials published in Volume 66 of The Dial magazine, a fortnightly political and literary review. The source available to us features issues from January 11 to June 28, 1919. This volume illustrates the pacifist and socialist viewpoint of Martyn Johnson (the owner) and the magazine’s staff. The magazine experience financial troubles in 1919 and was sold later that year. The magazine was re-directed by its new investors in a direction that was essentially literary in nature and it is this ‘re-creation’ of the magazine that is best known. (Summary by KevinS)

 
 

[chương_files]

 

Đang nghe:
Continue:    
1:
On what terms will Russia be permitted to enter the League of Nations
2:
Superficially, the results of the British elections are discouraging to liberals
3:
The conventional soldiers' monument ... is not the least ugly by-product of war
4:
Perhaps the memory that will live most vividly of Randolph Bourne...
5:
The attitude of The Dial in regard to Russia...
6:
How much longer will the American public endure our shameful intervention in Russia?
7:
The Peace Conference is confronted with four groups of questions...
8:
The program of the New School for Social Research...
9:
The campaign of the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian relief...
10:
... demand for the release of political prisoners ...
11:
The Government is left ... in possession of immense stores of munitions...
12:
The Russian problem is not the only one affecting Asia...
13:
The actual outcomes of the recent decisions of the Peace Conference...
14:
...the Paderewski faction in Poland...
15:
...the espionage habit.
16:
...National prohibition...
17:
What is the background of contemporary French foreign policy...
18:
...the [treatment of the] political prisoner...
19:
...the political futility and military failure of the ill-starred Allied expedition to North Russia...
20:
...the constitutionality of the Espionage Act.
21:
...President Wilson's choice of representatives to meet the Bolsheviki...
22:
The Dial apologizes...
23:
The routine cause cited for deportation against agitators...
24:
...the Russain revolution is of the classic type established by France...
25:
...teachers dismissed or suspended from the New York public schools...
26:
A second case of the interference of freedom of thought or expression...
27:
...George Jeffreys, the hanging judge...
28:
...the peace terms offered to Germany and Austria...
29:
The chief immediate value of the Covenant of the League of Nations...
30:
One of the chief obstacles in the way of a genuine and enduring peace with Germany...
31:
The Overman Committee...
32:
Opposed to Colonel Robins in the treatment of social unrest...
33:
...blundering policy in regard to the victims of war psychology...
34:
...Conscientious Objectors...
35:
Bolshevism is a menace to the vested interests of privilege and property.
36:
...the fable of the Sybilline books was frequently quoted...
37:
...the four leading partners [of the Peace Conference] have taken frankly to the practice of secret negotiation...
38:
"Sabotage" is one of the late and formidable loan-words of the English language.
39:
...filibuster...
40:
...education...
41:
...international cooperation to remove the causes of war.
42:
...the Victory Loan...
43:
The university promises to be the last citadel of sex privilege.
44:
...our pedagogy still shows a considerable blind-spot.
45:
...the fourteen points...
46:
... the attitude of the American people toward the lynching of negroes.
47:
...lynching is no longer purely a race problem...
48:
[police violence]
49:
The culture of the Nineteenth Century...
50:
[Immanuel Kant on Perpetual Peace]
51:
The war was won by America.
52:
The reasons for the defeat of America are easy to discern.
53:
The abandonment of the fourteen points...
54:
[The Peace Conference and its labor commissioners]
55:
Mr. Wilson either meant his fourteen points honestly or he did not.
56:
The treaty with Germany should be summarily rejected by the Senate.
57:
...the terms of the great peace were drawn to secure two objects...
58:
The chief use of a League of Nations...
59:
Today Walt Whitman is one hundred years old.
60:
Why should nearly everybody indulge a conviction that he can write poetry?
61:
The men of the Red Special...
62:
...atrocities committed by soldiers against their fellow citizens...
63:
Many readers of the Dial have noted the omission of the price in connection with the titles of books being reviewed.
64:
The treaty with Austria...
65:
...however much the Allies may want a League of Nations, they want other things more.
66:
President Wilson's recent speeches in Paris...
67:
The American Federation of Labor...
68:
Panem et Circenses...
69:
Benjamin Glassberg has been dismissed from the New York public schools...
70:
...in these days of popular education everyone writes, or threatens to do so...
71:
...the vicious constitution of the Great Powers at Versailles...
72:
...the thirty-ninth annual convention of the American Federation...
73:
...anti-radical bill introduced by Senator King...
74:
Why does America produce so little serious fiction of good quality?
75:
[The Peace Conference and the Covenant of the League of Nations]