4) So now I've been using "The People's REpublic of Letters," which I like, but is also a bit obscure and...
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Replying to @PatrickIber
5) ...also I say in paragraph 2 of the introduction that the idea of the People's Republic of Letters is a myth, so that's bad
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Replying to @PatrickIber
6) And it also it tends to focus the attention on the Communist side of things, when half the book is about anti-Communists
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Replying to @PatrickIber
7) There's a Camus quote about all revolutionaries ending up as either oppressors or heretics, I could try "Oppressors and Heretics"
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Replying to @PatrickIber
8) I also thought of "The Art of Revolution," but that could be the title of a lot of things
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Replying to @PatrickIber
9) So much so that it is, in fact, the title of a lot of things
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Replying to @PatrickIber
10) Maybe "The Freedoms of Oppression" or "Snow Freedom and the Seven Oppressions" or something
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Replying to @PatrickIber
@PatrickIber How about something like "Cultural Fronts" (which covers both communists and anti-communists)?3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @HeerJeet
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@HeerJeet@PatrickIber “Cultural Fronts: Cold-War Intellectual Culture in Latin America”1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @delong1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
@PatrickIber @delong "Warm and Cold Fronts: Cold-War Intellectual Culture in Latin America" would be a good title.
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