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Peter Wood on Partisan Review on National Review Online (898 words) |
 | Partisan Review was a force to be reckoned with from the late 1930s to the early 1960s. |
 | This was a painful time for Partisan mostly because it had fallen so far behind the dance of cultural politics a dance in which it had once been among the leading figures. |
 | Partisan Review taught a generation or two of intellectuals how to engage in intelligent cultural criticism. |
| BOOKFORUM | spring 2004 (3796 words) |
 | First, going way backeven though this was no longer the Partisan of its great decades (the journal came to BU in 1978)I had a strong residue of provincial awe and often thought as I pushed open the building door that I was in live proximity to something legendary. |
 | The reviewer is winking at her audience, creating her analogy from the democratic realm of popular culture; she will not be caught out insisting on anything that smacks of an absolute standard or posture of judgment. |
 | Partisan Review lost relevance and went under because that audience and that conjunction of beliefs and ideals faded away. |