Our forgotten goddess
by Brian Doherty
Reason
02/05
Review of The Woman and the Dynamo, by Stephen Cox: "Paterson was appalled by the love for state planning that ruled the literary intellectuals of the '30s. Many were fascists, many communists, but hardly any believed that individuals or markets should be left to run freely. The standard opinion of the time was that markets required technocratic planning. The political themes fully expressed in The God of the Machine began showing up in Paterson's columns (which were never strictly about reviewing books) in the '30s and early '40s. These ideological intimations led Edmund Wilson to dismiss her as irrelevant, declaring her 'the last surviving person to believe in those quaint old notions on which the republic was founded'...
http://www.reason.com/0502/cr.bd.our.shtml
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
Reason
02/05
Review of The Woman and the Dynamo, by Stephen Cox: "Paterson was appalled by the love for state planning that ruled the literary intellectuals of the '30s. Many were fascists, many communists, but hardly any believed that individuals or markets should be left to run freely. The standard opinion of the time was that markets required technocratic planning. The political themes fully expressed in The God of the Machine began showing up in Paterson's columns (which were never strictly about reviewing books) in the '30s and early '40s. These ideological intimations led Edmund Wilson to dismiss her as irrelevant, declaring her 'the last surviving person to believe in those quaint old notions on which the republic was founded'...
http://www.reason.com/0502/cr.bd.our.shtml
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
Starmail - 9. Feb, 14:42