ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1973, this volume documents Bertrand Russell’s travels in America covering the period 1896-1945. It is presented in two halves with the first a biographical account of Russell’s involvement with the United States, with special reference to the seven visits he made there during this time period. Throughout this section the most representative of Russell’s journalistic writings are highlighted and these are presented as full texts in the second half of the book.

This collection is assembled to provide an understanding of Russell’s deep and many-sided involvement with the United States during his life. A documented account, it is supplemented with important letters, photographs and newspaper articles.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part I|196 pages

Part I

chapter 1|9 pages

America in 1896

chapter 2|11 pages

Lucy Donnelly of Bryn Mawr

chapter 3|10 pages

The Harvard Term, 1914

chapter 4|11 pages

First World War

chapter 5|17 pages

A Letter to the President

chapter 6|5 pages

Controversy at Harvard

chapter 7|11 pages

Hopes and Fears

chapter 8|9 pages

Socialist Teacher, 1924

chapter 9|24 pages

Marriage and Morals

chapter 10|9 pages

Return to America, 1938

chapter 11|17 pages

A New York Appointment

chapter 12|16 pages

The Chair of Indecency

chapter 13|32 pages

The Barnes Foundation

chapter 14|12 pages

Getting Back to England

part II|143 pages

Part II

chapter 15|2 pages

President Wilson's Statement

Russell's editorial for the Tribunal (London, 1 February 1917)

chapter 16|3 pages

America's Entry into the War

Russell's editorial for the Tribunal (London, 19 April 1917)

chapter 17|8 pages

Hopes and Fears as Regards America

The New Republic (Washington D.C., Part I, 15 March 1922, and Part II, 22 March 1922)

chapter 18|4 pages

Impressions of America: Labour and a Third Party

The New Leader (London, 22 August 1924)

chapter 19|4 pages

The American Intelligentsia

The Nation and the Athenaeum (London, 11 October 1924)

chapter 20|8 pages

Is America Becoming Imperialistic?

Unpublished (1925)

chapter 21|5 pages

The New Philosophy of America

The Fortnightly Review (London, May 1928); originally published in The New York Times Magazine (22 May 1927), as ‘The New Life that Is America's’

chapter 22|4 pages

Optimistic America

The Herald Tribune Magazine (New York, 6 May 1928)

chapter 23|3 pages

The Cinema as a Moral Influence

Forward, English-language section (New York, 24 March 1929); published as ‘When Bertrand Russell Goes to the Movies'

chapter 24|6 pages

Homogeneous America

Outlook and Independent (New York, 19 February 1930); reprinted as ‘Modern Homogeneity' in In Praise of Idleness and Other Essays (London and New York, 1935)

chapter 25|8 pages

Thirty Years From Now

The Virginia Quarterly Review (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, October 1930)

chapter 26|2 pages

The End of Prohibition

The New York American (6 December 1933)

chapter 27|2 pages

On Equality

The New York American (8 January 1934); published as ‘Equality'

chapter 28|2 pages

The Root Causes of the Depression

Unpublished (c. 1934)

chapter 29|2 pages

Can the President Succeed?

Unpublished (c. 1934)

chapter 30|2 pages

On States Rights

Unpublished (c. 1934)

chapter 31|3 pages

Individual Freedom in England and America

Unpublished (c. 1938)

chapter 32|2 pages

The American Mind

Unpublished (c. 1938)

chapter 33|4 pages

America: The Next World Centre

Unpublished (c. 1938)

chapter 34|7 pages

Democracy and Economics

Survey Graphic (New York, February 1939)

chapter 35|3 pages

The Case for U.S. Neutrality

Common Sense Magazine (New Jersey, March 1939)

chapter 36|9 pages

Freedom and the Colleges

The American Mercury (Washington, D.C., May 1940); reprinted in Why I Am Not a Christian, (London and New York, 1957).

chapter 37|7 pages

Education in America

Common Sense Magazine (New Jersey, June 1941)

chapter 38|13 pages

The Problem of Minorities

Unpublished; delivered as a lecture to the Rand School of Social Science, New York, between October/December 1942

chapter 39|10 pages

Can Americans and Britons be Friends?

The Saturday Evening Post (Philadelphia, 3 June 1944)

chapter 40|12 pages

British and American Nationalism

Horizon (London, January 1945)

chapter 41|6 pages

Some Impressions of America

Unpublished (c. 1944–5)