Abstract

The archival record indicates that the Smart Setmagazine played a no less revolutionary role in the American literary marketplace than its well-known successor the New Yorker, and that in the years leading up to the postwar American literary renaissance, this mass-market magazine introduced more American readers than any other magazine of the period to the particular writers, the literary trends, and the critical ideas which would prove to be key factors in the development of American modernism.

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