languages , and imitated by percep–
t ive writers. I Would Have Saved
Them
If
I Could differs in several
respects but is j ust as quick and pre–
cise. Again Michaels is obsessed
with city life, views of the sexual
body/erot ic brain , and modern styles
of living .
JEFFERSON, NATIONALISM, AND
THE ENLIGHTENMENT, by Henry
Steele Commager. George Brazlller,
$7 .50
Whether he is writing on Thomas
Jefferson or "The Pursuit of Hap–
piness ," on " The Past As an Exten–
sion of the Present" or " The Nature of
American Nationalism ," Dr. Com–
mager is always the preeminent stu–
dent of the history of ideas , of the
rise and transformation of American
nationality , and of constitution–
alism .
MELVILLE, by Edwin Haviland
Miller. Venture, $15.00
Melville, the first new biography of
America's great storyteller in twenty–
five years , is a major achievement .
Intricately and sensitively , Edwin
Haviland Miller depicts the delicate
balance between Melville's life and
his creativity and offers a new per–
spective on the impact of family
members upon Melville's artistic ex–
perience.
FREUD'S "PROJECT" REASSES–
SED : Preface to Contemporary Cog–
nitive Theory and Neuropsychology,
by Karl H. Pribram, M.D. and Merton
M. Gill , M.D. Basic Books, $10.00
In this important book, two out–
stand ing scholars explain why one of
Freud 's least read works actually
contains a more lucid , more under–
standable statement of the psycho–
analytic model than is available any–
where else. The authors set out to re–
evaluate the " Project" in the hope of
reestab l ishing the ties between
psychoanalysis and biological
psychiatry, and of making Freud's
theories of consciousness and think–
ing more available to cognitive and
experimental psychologists .
647
POSCHER AND KNIES: The Logical
Problems of Historical Economics,
by Max Weber, translated with an
Introduction by Guy Oakes. Free
Press, $10.95
This is Max Weber's most ambi–
tious, original , and important work
on the problems of social-science
procedure. It introduces all the basic
themes which reappear in his later
theoretical essays dealing with the
logical properties of the " socio–
cultural " sciences.
ART CHRONICLES 1954-1966, by
Frank O'Hara. Venture, $15.00 (80
Illustrations)
The essential years In the lives of
Pollock, Kline, Smith, Moherwell,
Naklan, Cavallon, Frankenthaler,
Rivers, Spaventa, Guston and Katz
This exciting volume of Frank
O'Hara's art writ ings offers a rare
insight into the art scene of the fifties
and sixties , that unusual time when
most of the prominent artists worked
together to bring a new dimension to
American art .
EAGLE AND SWORD: The Federal–
Ists and the Creation of the Military
Establishment In America, 1783-
1802, by Richard H. Kohn. Free
Press, $13.95
This book probes the political-mi Ii–
tary events of America's first two
decades and chronicles the serious
threat of militarism which challenged
the democratic ideals of the young
American nation .
MAUPASSANT, by Michael Lerner.
George Brazlller, $12.50
This new biographical study of
Guy de Maupassant casts a fresh
light upon an era of social and literary
upheaval , while evaluating modern
evidence concerning the develop–
ment of Maupassant's career-from
his youth, as a pupil of Flaubert's , to
his becoming one of France's most
famed writers .
UNIVERSITIES IN THE WESTERN
WORLD, edited by Paul Seabury.
Free Press, $11.95
Examines the aims of education ,
the proper standards of the univer–
sity, freedom and equality in the
universities, academic ethics , and
the university's autonomy versus