| Dwight Macdonald |
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| CATEGORIES ABOUT DWIGHT MACDONALD | |
| 1906 births | |
| 1982 deaths | |
| american non-fiction writers | |
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| phillips exeter academy alumni | |
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Macdonald was born in New York City and was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and Yale University . His first job was as a trainee executive for Macy's but he shortly moved to Time Magazine , where he was offered a position by Yale classmate Henry Luce . From 1928 Macdonald was an associate editor at Luce's ambitious Fortune , an ironic position for Macdonald and his Marxist principles. He married in 1934 Nancy Gardiner Rodman (1910-1996), sister of Selden Rodman and anarchist. He resigned from Fortune in 1936 over an editorial dispute, when the magazine's executives edited his extended four-part attack on U.S. Steel . As an editor Macdonald went on to edit Partisan Review from 1937 to 1943, his own journal '' Politics '' from 1944 through 1949. As an editor he helped foster diverse voices such as Lionel Trilling , Bruno Bettelheim and C. Wright Mills . All along he was contributing to '' The New Yorker '' as a staff writer and to '' Esquire '' as film critic, gradually becoming well-known enough to perform movie reviews on the Today Show in the 1960s. Macdonald deserted Trotskyism like many intellectuals of the time and moved on with characteristic cheer to pacifism and Anarchism . In the 1950s, he was a fierce anti-Communist Cold Warrior . Later still, he was an even fiercer opponent of the Vietnam War and a great enthusiast for the Student Radical s of the 1960s like Abbie Hoffman . (See for example Norman Podhoretz , "Ex-Friends".) Showing characteristic unpredictability, he combined this newfound radicalism with a pitiless cultural conservatism that owed something to Theodor Adorno , though with a most un-Adorno-like wit. A sympathetic account of Macdonald's final years, suffering with alcholism and writer's block and a decade of psychotherapy, can be found in the James Atlas biography of the poet Delmore Schwartz . WORKS
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