Showing Atlantic articles
  • The Menace of Radiation

    Radioactive fall-out from test explosions of atomic bombs has made clear to Americans that nuclear warfare would mean annihilation of large areas. Less well understood is the fact that leakage of radioactive materials resulting from careless operation of atomic power plants and other peacetime uses of nuclear energy can be just as deadly. For a sober review of the facts about radiation we turn to N. J. BERRILL, Professor of Zoology at McGill University. A leading embryologist and specialist in marine biology, Professor Berrill is the author of several books, including Journey into Wonder, Sex and the Nature of Things, and Man’s Emerging Mind, which will be published this fall by Dodd, Mead.

  • A Study of Mexican Villagers

    Educated at Harvard and Oxford, MICHAEL MACCOBY taught at Harvard and at (he University of Chicago. In 1960, he went to Mexico on a U.S. Public Health Fellowship from the National Institute of Mental Health. He is working with Erich Fromm on a study of a Mexican village which they call Las Cuevas. He is also practicing as a psychoanalyst, and he teaches at the Nalional University in Mexico City.

  • The Shifty Earth

    Modern science has penetrated the mysteries of space, but the nature of the earth’s depths remains to be explored. N. J. BERRILL here gives us an account of the theories thus far advanced by geologists and biologists regarding our changing planet. Mr. Berrill is professor of zoology at McGill University and the author of several books, includingJOURNEY INTO WONDER, SEX AND THE NATURE OF THINGS,andMAN’S EMERGING MIND.

  • The Bald Primaqueera

    It is fitting and typical of Sean O’Casey that his last work, this essay on the theater of decay and despair, should be more than a polemic . It is a vigorous affirmation that life is worth living from a great playwright whose own early work set off a riot in a Dublin theater and was called “sewage .”Mr. O’Casey wrote the article a few weeks before his death last September at the age of eighty-four.

  • The Masterpiece No One Wanted to Save

    Censored and then forgotten, Anatoly Kuznetsov’s Babi Yar, about the Nazi occupation of Kyiv, is again painfully relevant.

    A black-and-white photo of Soviet prisoners of war covering a mass grave at Babi Yar
  • White Supremacy Is a Script

    In South Africa, a broken culture of law enforcement has extended long past the formal end of apartheid.

    A black-and-white photo of South African police officers patrolling Johannesburg
  • The Most Dangerous Democrat in Iowa

    As state auditor—and his party’s only elected politician in statewide office—Rob Sand is in the Republicans’ sights. But his eyes are on higher things.

    Iowa Democrat Rob Sand
  • The 400-Year-Old Tragedy That Captures Our Chaos

    Pop culture is finding new currency in the tale of a king beset by madness.

    Collage of Brian Cox as Logan Roy, the patriarch of "Succession," with a crown on his head