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  1. www.laphamsquarterly.org › contributors › bryantBryant | Lapham’s Quarterly

    Having begun in 1912 to write for radical publications, among them The Masses and Blast, Louise Bryant left her dentist husband and her home in Portland, Oregon, on New Year’s Eve in 1915 for fellow journalist John Reed in New York City.

  2. 2 de dez. de 2021 · It presents Reed and Louise Bryant — played by Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton — as entirely correct and justified in giving up everything to support the Bolsheviks. And although Reds hit the screens in the first flush of the Reagan era, with the Cold War still in full swing, it was both a critical and box office success.

  3. Louise Bryant (* 5. Dezember 1885 in San Francisco , Kalifornien ; † 6. Januar 1936 in Sèvres ) war eine US-amerikanische Journalistin und Autorin, die vor allem durch marxistisch und anarchistisch inspirierte Vorstellungen und Essays über radikale Politik und feministische Fragestellungen bekannt wurde.

  4. 1 de jan. de 1996 · This book is a very thoroughly researched account of the life and times of Louise Bryant. There are been discrepencies about her actually birth date, but I found her family on the 1900 Census for Nevada and she is listed as being born in December 1886 instead of the guess year being 1885.

  5. Louise Bryant. Louise Bryant, the daughter of the radical journalist, Hugh Moran, was born in Reno, Nevada, on 5th December 1885. Later, after the death of her father, she adopted the name of her stepfather, Sheridan Bryant, a railroad conductor.

  6. In this dazzling comprehensive biography of Louise Bryant, Mary V. Dearborn connects a constitutionally unconventional woman to an era of stunning transformations. Known to many as the wife of the radical journalist John Reed, Bryant was a pioneering foreign correspondent in her own right, a fervent crusader for social causes, and an unabashed champion of sexual freedom.

  7. 16 de mai. de 2023 · Louise Bryant 1885 - 1936. Biography. The Portland Years of John Reed & Louise Bryant, by Michael Munk from Encyclopedia of Marxism