June 1971

In This Issue
Explore the June 1971 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
The Peripatetic Reviewer
Man's World, Woman's Place
The Exorcist
Weird and Tragic Shores
Confessions of a White Racist
A Dutiful Daughter
The Paper House
Masochism
The Wolf-Man: His Memoirs
The Innocent Killers
The Innocent Killers
A Rap on Race
Levkas Man
Israel
Innocent Bystander: I-Lessin Gaza: The Greening of Charles A. Reich
To Die Standing: Cesar Chavez and the Chicanos
A look backward provides a glimpse ahead. The work done in the vineyards around Delano, California, in the years of the grape-pickers’ strike has fed the ferment now going on in city streets where MexicanAmericans who have “deserted the hoe for the car wash” are moved by the mystique of Chavez and the words of Zapata.
The Editor's Page
Confessions of a Stockbroker
The Highland Boy
Notes On
The New York Skyline, An Island Salt Pond, Chapel Market, Breaking an Ankle in London, Loneliness, Running for Parliament, Running for Governor of New York, Law and Order, The Dental Floss Problem, The Family, TheVillage, Community, The SST, The Wealth of Nations
Washington
Lobotomy
Pursuits
Jim Larkin
The Versemaker's Wish
The Social Theory of Herbert Marcuse: Which Side Is He On?
To many who have read him, and to others who know his influence but not his written works, a seventy-two-year-old philosopher and teacher is the chart-maker for the way to the new revolution. A writer, lawyer, and political analyst who has examined Marcuse’s social theory argues that Marcusian thought leads elsewhere.
Life & Letters
A Little Light on the Subject
The Inhuman Future
