January 1923

In This Issue
Explore the January 1923 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
In China, Too
Pearl S. Buck, an American-born writer who was raised in China and continues to live and teach there with her husband, reflects on the social and cultural changes transforming China's young people.
The Diary of Joseph Farington: A Picture of the England of George Iii
The Return of the Turk
On the Technique of Being Deaf
The European Chaos
The Drug Habit in Finance
Shall America Support the New World Court?
The Amenities of Grippe
More Literary Real-Estate
Rzysplympski!
The Contributors' Column
Publishers and Literature
The Furnace-Worker
Some 1923 Books
'The Notion-Counter' in Vienna
Lafcadio Hearn's Brother
An Engagement on the Rhine
The Ancient Days of the Spanish War: Chapters From the Diary of John D. Long
A Prelude
Nyasaland Sketches: In the Chikala Range
Literature in College
Spirit
'Labor Once Lost'
Only a Conversation
Hail and Farewell
The Ghost-Plays of Japan
Rough-Hewn
The Cathedral
The Letters of Franklin K. Lane
Letters of James Gibbons Huneker
Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement: Written From His Unpublished and Personal Material
The Second Empire
