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TITLE: ATLANTIC Monthly Magazine
[Founded in 1857, and still in publication, one of America's oldest magazines! ATLANTIC MONTHLY features interesting and intelligent articles, and vintage advertisements of the day. Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!]
ISSUE DATE: SEPTEMBER 1993; VOLUME 272 No. 3
CONDITION: Magazine size: Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE: [Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17


COVER: DEAFNESS CULTURE.

DEAFNESS AS CULTURE: Increasingly, the deaf see themselves not as handicapped or disabled but simply as members of a distinct cultural and linguistic community--one that should be nurtured and preserved. The author writes, "The surprise is not simply the unfamiliarity of the views; it is that, as in a surrealist painting, jarring notions are presented as if they were commonplaces." by EDWARD DOLNICK.

THE CONCEPTUAL POVERTY OF U.S. FOREIGN POLICY: Those in charge of the nation's foreign affairs--and the analysts who back them up--seem to be operating on the assumption that the end of the Cold War means nothing. by JONATHAN CLARKE.

CAN SELFISHNESS SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT?: Let's not pin all our hopes on good will to change environmental practices, the authors argue. Let's harness, instead, a more reliable and fundamental force.. by MATT RIDLEY AND BOBBI S. LOW.

REPORTS & COMMENT:
NOTES:
FORCED '10 HAVE FUN Lick lines and all that: family vacations of yore. by DAVID OwEN.
OKINAWA:
AFTER THE VOLCANO The people of Okinawa, whose island home was one of the world's bloodiest battlegrounds, remain in the shadow of the Second World War. by GEORGE FEWER.
TECHNOLOGY: MUDROOM. Computers now offer access to a variety of artificial environments, from which interacting users are sometimes loath to return. by JACQUES LESLIE.
FICTION AND POETRY:
THE DEATH OF REASON by EAVAN BOLAND.
PEELING by JOHN SAYLES.
ARTS AND LEISURE:
FOOD:
RUBBING IT IN Marinades are fine, but dry rubs can be better. by CORBY KUMMER.
Music:
BORROWED BEATS The Cuban influence on American popular music. by GENE SANTORO.
TRAVEL: HOME ON THE ROAD A guide to the varied world and growing national networks of bed-and-breakfasts.. by PHILIP LANGDON.
OTHER DEPARTMENTS: 745 BOYLSTON STREET/ CONTRIBUTORS.
LE'I"I'ERs TO THE EDITOR.
THE SEPTEMBER ALMANAC.
AT LAST COUNT The Never-Married by RODGER DOYLE.
FIRST ENCOUNTERS Ingrid Bergman and Howard Hughes by EDWARD SOREL AND NANCY CALDWELI, SOREL.
BOOKS:
AN ICON OF ENGLISHRY Philip Larkin: A Writer's Life, by Andrew Motion by GEOFFREY WHEATCROFT.
TRUE WEST. Streets of Laredo, by Larry McMurtry. by NICHOLAS LEMANN.
BRIEF REVIEWS by PHOEBE-LOU ADAMS.
THE PUZZLER by EMILY Cox AND HENRY RATHRON WORD HISTORIES by CRAIG M. CARVER.

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