The New Republic has published an anniversary issue (1914-1984) devoted to its own history. Professor John P. Diggins subtitles this epic as “seventy years of enlightened mistakes, principled compromises, and unconventional wisdom”–an absolution by way of paradoxes. In fact, Prof. Diggins’s report reads as a tale of foolish wise men who may always claim the privilege of a time-warp or historical corrective, which delivers them from all responsibility for what they were “then” thinking, writing, and extolling. The immaturity of a young Walter Lippmann and the smelly Stalinism of a ripe Malcolm Cowley are not, to our mind, the most honorable pages in the annals of American journalism. The newest rendition of TNR under the stewardship of Martin Peretz, for all its dialectical arrogance and ideological superstition, seems to us a vast improvement over what TNR was in its heyday of “enlightened mistakes.” cc
March 1985April 21, 2022By Herbert London
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