SCIENCE & SOCIETY

VOLUME 65, NUMBER 1, SPRING 2001

Special Issue:  Color,  Culture and Gender in the 1960s,
Guest-edited by Paul Mishler and Alan Wald

*Editorial Perspectives: An Intense and Many-Textured Moment

*Introduction, by Paul Mishler and Alan Wald


ARTICLES
 *Havana Up in Harlem: LeRoi Jones, Harold Cruse and the Making of a
Cultural Revolution, by Cynthia Young

 *Contingency Plans for the Feminist Revolution, by Elisabeth Armstrong

 *Medium UnCool: Women Shoot Back; Feminism, Film and 1968 A Curious
Documentary, by  Paula Rabinowitz

  *Closing the (Heterosexual) Frontier: Midnight Cowboy as National
Allegory, by Kevin Floyd


REVIEW ARTICLES
*Chicanos and the Shaping of the Left, by Zaragosa Vargas

*Contradictions of the Intellectuals, by Paul Buhle

*Raising Consciousness,Eyebrows, and Hell, by  Hester Eisenstein



                                            Published quarterly since
1936, Science & Society is the
                                            longest continuously
published journal of Marxist scholarship, in
                                            any language, in the world.

                                            Science & Society is a
peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal of
                                            Marxist scholarship. It
publishes original studies in political
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                                            contemporary Marxist
discussion, and does not attempt to define
                                            precise boundaries for
Marxism. It does encourage respectful
                                            attention to the entire
Marxist tradition, as well as to cutting-edge
                                            tools and concepts from the
present-day social science
                                            literatures.

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--

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901

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