Matthew Josephson
The New Republic, The Nation, The New Yorker, The Saturday Evening Post, Jean-Jacques Rousseau
978-613-5-88956-7
6135889567
88
2012-04-29
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Matthew Josephson (February 15, 1899 – March 13, 1978) was an American journalist and author of works on nineteenth-century French literature and twentieth-century American economic history. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he graduated from Columbia University and married Hannah Geffen in 1920. They lived in Europe in the 1920s. Initially Josephson wrote poetry, published in Galimathias (1923), and reported for various "little magazines." He became associate editor of Broom (1922-24) and contributing editor of Transition (1928-29). Josephson was also a regular contributor to The New Republic, The Nation, The New Yorker, and the Saturday Evening Post. Josephson's first biographies were Zola and His Time (1928) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1932). Influenced by Charles A. Beard and the Depression, and with only one major exception, Stendhal: or the Pursuit of Happiness (1946), Josephson changed his focus of interest from literature to economic history when he published The Robber Barons in 1934. This was followed by more full-length works in which Josephson served as a spokesman for intellectuals of his generation who were dissatisfied with the social and political status quo.
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普通和比较文学
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