Did Whittaker Chambers suffer from a paranoid image of the Cold War?
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned
2012.01.14 • 21:51 0
Did Whittaker Chambers suffer from a paranoid image of the Cold War?
Read comment here, which link back to Moviefone article.
Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned
2011.02.01 • 10:30 0
From August 3, 1948, until today, America has had to wait to learn more about the head of Soviet espionage in Washington during the 1930s.
On that day, Whittaker Chambers (my grandfather) told the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) under subpoena…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Actor, Alexander Stevens, J. Peters, Red Conspirator, Thomas Sakmyster, Whittaker Chambers
2011.01.03 • 09:30 0
…I would go further. More than muffling Whittaker Chambers’s intellectual thought, Reinsch strangles it. He narrows Chambers’s vistas to his own private passion: conversion passages in Witness (page 83). Fixation aside, nothing is new… Reinsch ditches insight for personal bias.
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(Reprint from “Letters: Muffled—or Strangled?,” published in the January 2011 issue of The New Criterion)
Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Subject, Michael Kimmage, Sam Tanenhaus, William F. Buckley Jr.
2010.11.03 • 19:27 1
Reinsch’s treatment falls short… Where Chambers writes with passion and palpability, Reinsch offers fuzz. His prose muffles the screams…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Subject, Dostoevsky, Solzhenitsyn, Tolstoy, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 01:11 1
“The last time a cohort of young people expressed comparable frustration at the emptiness of their lives and the dispiriting purposelessness of their world was in the 1920s.” I knew about the 1920s from Whittaker Chambers…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Implied, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 01:09 0
No book has ever explained the inner agony of devoted party members and admirers as Darkness at Noon did. Reviewing the book for TIME magazine in 1941, Whittaker Chambers wrote…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 00:21 0
Biography requires insight, argues Dr. Carl Rollyson in his latest book… — the biographer must know the subject so well as to be able to assess the subject’s self-honesty. Rollyson discusses… Martha Gellhorn… the example, a look at Hiss Case protagonists Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 00:19 0
Assassination is something Whittaker Chambers (among many defecting communists) feared. In today’s Russia, it has arisen to international prominence anew with the apparent assassination of Alexander Litvinenko…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Implied, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 00:18 0
Heilbrun she sheds more light on Chambers and his contemporaries than many others…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned, Whittaker Chambers
2010.08.16 • 00:15 0
Brenner relies heavily on anecdotes from others and from her subjects’s memoirs. Diana Trilling is a good example, and Brenner’s treatment of Whittaker Chambers a good case in point…
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Filed under: Whittaker Chambers - Mentioned, Whittaker Chambers