Orwell, Pasternak, Hemingway, Greene: Remembering a time when literature was a weapon of cultural warfare... more »
Dickens’s fiction drew on the most painful secrets of his life. His gift: turning insecurity into a creative asset... more »
To Richard Russo, time spent arguing over cultural appropriation might be better spent extolling the triumphs of the literary imagination... more »
We celebrate the Renaissance, but consider this: The period contributed very little to innovation in science... more »
Simone and André Weil devoted themselves to the search for truth. He solved mathematical problems. She died before she could solve the problem of life.... more »
We have developed an ill-advised self-seriousness about the novel — so much so, says Dave Eggers, that we have overlooked one of the wittiest books ever written... more »
Two things guide Barbara Ehrenreich: anger and curiosity. "I live for surprises”... more »
The key to understanding the modern human mind is found in the ancient hunter myths. Or so says Roberto Calasso... more »
Literary culture is tactile, embedded in our social environment. When cities go quiet, and intellectual life happens remotely, much is lost... more »
Caravan, a little magazine in India, analyzes the news with “adversarial politics.” Bring on the harassment, defamation suits, and sleepless nights... more »
The meaning of doubt. "Unbelief needs the believer’s reflecting gaze to better understand itself"... more »
Do aphorisms convey wisdom or merely impersonate it? For Plato, they were enigmatic evasions — the scattered utterances of clever men... more »
What was it like to sit in the Thomaskirche in 1723 and hear Bach’s music the way that Bach heard it?... more »
Lydia Davis is a writer for whom the subject is always, on some level, writing itself... more »
After the pandemic. Bill McKibben, Noam Chomsky, and others try forecasting a dark future... more »
How to steal a Van Gogh: "Talk smooth, be cool, have a fast car, and never touch anyone”... more »
John Rawls’s work can take on the quality of a sacred text. Was his appeal related to the declining status of Christianity?... more »
A culinary mystery: Vinaigrette has been hailed as a triumph of French culture — but is its origin actually Italian?... more »
As the cultural status of novelists has declined, the power of the provocateur has risen. For Lionel Shriver, the latter has overshadowed the former... more »
Martin Hägglund’s philosophical blockbuster, This Life, has been widely lauded. Yet for such a liberating text, it’s stunningly parochial... more »
"The trolley-problem problem." Thought experiments are as old as philosophy itself, but are they a useful way to reason about ethics?... more »
Nothing about George Simenon’s career is like anyone else’s. He was wildly prolific at hackwork and writing detective novels. And then he dictated 22 autobiographical works... more »
For some “intellectually displaced” women in the 1960s, a haven beckoned — the Radcliffe Institute, feminism’s first think tank... more »
As an experience and an idea, solitude is no simple matter. It is both a necessary refuge and a public health menace... more »
Jonathan Haidt on culture war: “This year or into next year will be kind of a pit of despair or a pit of darkness — and then we’ll emerge from it”... more »
The world is turbulent and tragic, while philosophers are cool and rational. Their field would gain so much if they could be moved... more »
Success requires flirting with the public, said George Bernard Shaw. He was more accomplished as a flirt than as a playwright... more »
Why do we use categories — fantasy, literary, gothic — to describe novels? Tim Parks proposes a new taxonomy... more »
From Knausgaard to Lerner to Heti, we’re plagued by goodness — as if readers were scandalized by immoral characters in fiction... more »
László Földényi leads an assault on rationalism. In his prosecutorial zeal, is he missing the bigger picture?... more »
How well do we know Philip Roth? Too well? Or not well enough? Let’s check his archive... more »
Coffee, “the most grateful lubricant of the human machine,” has made — and destroyed — entire societies... more »
The value of science as a credential seems stronger than ever. Is this ubiquity a symptom of its decline?... more »
Everyone wants a glimpse of the post-Covid world, so the public square is thick with prophets. Ignore them... more »
The poetry of Paul Valéry seems the work of a man behind his times. But beneath the old-fashioned veneer is the shock of the modern... more »
John Cage stroking bits of wire, Leonard Bernstein conducting Beethoven’s Ninth: The strangely addictive joy of classical YouTube... more »
We know Raphael as a painter, but his life might have turned out far differently — he was also a formidable architect... more »
The art critic Hal Foster separated “good” from “bad” postmodernism. How real is that distinction?... more »
The rise of individualism is linked to that of infectious diseases. Leo Robson traces the inevitable effect on literature... more »
Behind Kepler’s discoveries was remarkable data compiled by Tycho Brahe, a fierce astronomer with an artificial golden nose... more »
With his puncturing of ideology and his wild, hallucinatory tales, Robert Stone reshaped what the American crime thriller could be... more »
For Locke and Rousseau, home schooling was ideal. For many parents now, not so much. What’s the basis of a moral education?... more »
It's a trope of science fiction that machines will become human-like. The real threat: Humans will become machine-like... more »
Shame is about dishonor, vulnerability, and disgrace. It's also a tool of politics and power... more »
The impulse to compare contemporary political events to the past lives on. But such analogies hinder more than they help... more »
“What conditions are necessary for the creation of works of art?” Virginia Woolf’s question has always been thorny for women... more »
The Anglo-Boer War is remembered, when it's remembered at all, for those who improbably played a part: Churchill, Gandhi, Kipling, Conan Doyle... more »
Greil Marcus isn’t afraid, as one reader put it, to let “everything remind him of everything else.” It's both a gift and a liability... more »
What did Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Walter Benjamin read? One woman was keeping track... more »
Clive James was perhaps Philip Larkin's best reader. But his Larkin is a projection — the poet that James wanted to be... more »
“Art breathes from containments and suffocates from freedom,” said Leonardo da Vinci. Contemporary art is suffocating... more »
Love and theft. How a stolen de Kooning ended up in the master bedroom of a pink stucco house in New Mexico... more »
There are lots of supposed polymaths. They’re brilliant in one field, but mediocre in others. True polymaths are rare... more »
During London’s Great Plague, Samuel Pepys was resigned to his fate yet found much to rejoice in. Pandemics are complicated... more »
Magical mummy masks; the “finding” of a first-century fragment — why was the world’s leading papyrologist involved in such shenanigans?... more »
In 1979, Richard Rorty suggested that philosophy was over; graduate students might as well give up. One of his own, Robert Brandom, has now proven that thought absurd... more »
Heiner Müller was a poet, playwright, and Stasi informant. The messiness of his life speaks to the complexity of postwar Germany... more »
Deep-speare is a computer that composes poetry. But an original sonnet isn’t necessarily a good sonnet... more »
When Henry James and Robert Louis Stevenson met, they debated the nature of fiction and griped about — what else? — money... more »
Critics once assessed the value of books. Now they use reviews as opportunities to showcase their erudition... more »
Lexicographer extraordinaire, paragon of learning, purveyor of practical wisdom, Samuel Johnson was above all a moralist... more »
Edward Said and the culture wars. His attempts to woo the American academy into opposing imperialism were as fruitless as “cajoling a cat into altruism”... more »
According to Peter Turchin and others in cliodynamics, historical material can be used to predict the future. Historians are skeptical... more »
Orwell, Pasternak, Hemingway, Greene: Remembering a time when literature was a weapon of cultural warfare... more »
We celebrate the Renaissance, but consider this: The period contributed very little to innovation in science... more »
Two things guide Barbara Ehrenreich: anger and curiosity. "I live for surprises”... more »
Caravan, a little magazine in India, analyzes the news with “adversarial politics.” Bring on the harassment, defamation suits, and sleepless nights... more »
What was it like to sit in the Thomaskirche in 1723 and hear Bach’s music the way that Bach heard it?... more »
How to steal a Van Gogh: "Talk smooth, be cool, have a fast car, and never touch anyone”... more »
As the cultural status of novelists has declined, the power of the provocateur has risen. For Lionel Shriver, the latter has overshadowed the former... more »
Nothing about George Simenon’s career is like anyone else’s. He was wildly prolific at hackwork and writing detective novels. And then he dictated 22 autobiographical works... more »
Jonathan Haidt on culture war: “This year or into next year will be kind of a pit of despair or a pit of darkness — and then we’ll emerge from it”... more »
Why do we use categories — fantasy, literary, gothic — to describe novels? Tim Parks proposes a new taxonomy... more »
How well do we know Philip Roth? Too well? Or not well enough? Let’s check his archive... more »
Everyone wants a glimpse of the post-Covid world, so the public square is thick with prophets. Ignore them... more »
We know Raphael as a painter, but his life might have turned out far differently — he was also a formidable architect... more »
Behind Kepler’s discoveries was remarkable data compiled by Tycho Brahe, a fierce astronomer with an artificial golden nose... more »
It's a trope of science fiction that machines will become human-like. The real threat: Humans will become machine-like... more »
“What conditions are necessary for the creation of works of art?” Virginia Woolf’s question has always been thorny for women... more »
What did Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Walter Benjamin read? One woman was keeping track... more »
Love and theft. How a stolen de Kooning ended up in the master bedroom of a pink stucco house in New Mexico... more »
Magical mummy masks; the “finding” of a first-century fragment — why was the world’s leading papyrologist involved in such shenanigans?... more »
Deep-speare is a computer that composes poetry. But an original sonnet isn’t necessarily a good sonnet... more »
Lexicographer extraordinaire, paragon of learning, purveyor of practical wisdom, Samuel Johnson was above all a moralist... more »
When he was 29, Mick Jagger was asked if he’d still perform at 60. “Yeah, easily, yeah." Why we never tire of the original rock ‘n’ rollers... more »
Telling us what the pandemic means is a risky endeavor in charlatanry. But does Slavoj Žižek have a point?... more »
Even before the pandemic forced all of us into quarantine, deprivation and isolation had become lifestyle signifiers. Meet the man who escaped into the dark... more »
“It can’t be that all of this enormous emotional, financial, and scholastic investment goes toward creating the next meaningless app”... more »
To understand how science works, you need to determine what makes theories fail. And there’s no better guide than the often-overlooked Imre Lakatos... more »
Zhang Shoucheng, a brilliant scientist at Stanford, was caught between U.S. and Chinese national interests. When he was found dead, the intrigue only grew... more »
What was most shocking about Machiavelli wasn't original, and what was original wasn't shocking: his realism... more »
Within 10 years, all Holocaust survivors will be dead. The Shoah Foundation has stockpiled 115,000 hours of their testimony. Is anyone listening?... more »
The author of The Marburg Virus, an improbable novel, is imploring his publisher to reissue it. That author is Boris Johnson’s father... more »
Who gets to read Ulysses? For a book full of fart jokes, as Stephen Fry points out, it gets accused of pretentiousness quite a lot... more »
Condé Nast was once known as “the Vogue company.” Now, as advertising revenue declines, is it “The New Yorker company”?... more »
When the pandemic has receded, no doubt the main takeaway will be: Don’t get caught off guard again. That is the wrong lesson... more »
Name the last novel to pass Andrew Ferguson's test: Would you be embarrassed at a cocktail party for not having read it?... more »
In 1947, Evelyn Waugh traveled to America to negotiate the film rights to Brideshead Revisited. Here’s why the trip was a disaster... more »
European intellectuals are urbane, spontaneous, digressive; their American counterparts, more professional and professorial. The stereotypes are outdated, yet revealing... more »
Anne Case and Angus Deaton first recognized “deaths of despair.” As economic hardships swell, their work may be more relevant than ever... more »
So what does Kierkegaard have to tell our age? A lot. First, we should stop thinking of ourselves as occupying an age at all... more »
Antonin Dvorak scavenged sounds from birds, swishing grass, stamping cows, shouts, and cries. In Iowa the music poured out of him... more »
The notion that the brain is like a computer has led neuroscience down a false path. It’s drowning in data and short on theoretical insight... more »
Dickens’s fiction drew on the most painful secrets of his life. His gift: turning insecurity into a creative asset... more »
Simone and André Weil devoted themselves to the search for truth. He solved mathematical problems. She died before she could solve the problem of life.... more »
The key to understanding the modern human mind is found in the ancient hunter myths. Or so says Roberto Calasso... more »
The meaning of doubt. "Unbelief needs the believer’s reflecting gaze to better understand itself"... more »
Lydia Davis is a writer for whom the subject is always, on some level, writing itself... more »
John Rawls’s work can take on the quality of a sacred text. Was his appeal related to the declining status of Christianity?... more »
Martin Hägglund’s philosophical blockbuster, This Life, has been widely lauded. Yet for such a liberating text, it’s stunningly parochial... more »
For some “intellectually displaced” women in the 1960s, a haven beckoned — the Radcliffe Institute, feminism’s first think tank... more »
The world is turbulent and tragic, while philosophers are cool and rational. Their field would gain so much if they could be moved... more »
From Knausgaard to Lerner to Heti, we’re plagued by goodness — as if readers were scandalized by immoral characters in fiction... more »
Coffee, “the most grateful lubricant of the human machine,” has made — and destroyed — entire societies... more »
The poetry of Paul Valéry seems the work of a man behind his times. But beneath the old-fashioned veneer is the shock of the modern... more »
The art critic Hal Foster separated “good” from “bad” postmodernism. How real is that distinction?... more »
With his puncturing of ideology and his wild, hallucinatory tales, Robert Stone reshaped what the American crime thriller could be... more »
Shame is about dishonor, vulnerability, and disgrace. It's also a tool of politics and power... more »
The Anglo-Boer War is remembered, when it's remembered at all, for those who improbably played a part: Churchill, Gandhi, Kipling, Conan Doyle... more »
Clive James was perhaps Philip Larkin's best reader. But his Larkin is a projection — the poet that James wanted to be... more »
There are lots of supposed polymaths. They’re brilliant in one field, but mediocre in others. True polymaths are rare... more »
In 1979, Richard Rorty suggested that philosophy was over; graduate students might as well give up. One of his own, Robert Brandom, has now proven that thought absurd... more »
When Henry James and Robert Louis Stevenson met, they debated the nature of fiction and griped about — what else? — money... more »
Edward Said and the culture wars. His attempts to woo the American academy into opposing imperialism were as fruitless as “cajoling a cat into altruism”... more »
Franz Boas in 1888: “It is most unpleasant work to steal bones from a grave, but what is the use, someone has to do it”... more »
William James’s critics mistake his pragmatism for simple relativism. He endures because he addressed the meaning of life... more »
A memoir that conceals. Rebecca Solnit’s latest book promises intimacy, but it speaks more powerfully on broad, collective problems... more »
Franz Boas inveighed against racism. But did his ideas ultimately help to strengthen its grip?... more »
Frivolous, self-indulgent, and gloriously smutty, Wayne Koestenbaum’s essays are also cerebral celebrations of desire and imagination... more »
Hail Sir Thomas Urquhart, royalist, duelist, self-proclaimed descendant of the gods, and creator of a universal language — not that he bothered to write it down... more »
Ross Douthat is man of many observations, interpretations, and predictions — most of which he's all too willing to back away from... more »
George Scialabba's doctor's notes — both mundane and revelatory — show what it means to be clinically depressed... more »
Kierkegaard saw himself as the “Socrates of Christendom,” but his theology requires some reframing: for one thing, his church was a library... more »
Hilary Mantel’s Thomas Cromwell is anachronistically modern: secular, tolerant, and kind to women, children, the poor, and animals... more »
William F. Cody — Buffalo Bill — has long shaped Americans’ idealistic sense of the frontier. But look more closely: His biography is full of darkness... more »
When David Pryce-Jones came visiting, Auden downed three martinis in a half-hour and had to be put to bed with a flask of Chianti... more »
Frank Ramsey died at age 26, in 1930. Yet intellectuals still encounter "the Ramsey effect" — you reach a breakthrough, only to realize he got there first... more »
"What does it mean to be an artist in an economy that actually doesn’t allow many people to make their living as artists?"... more »
“Pictures which are interpretable, and which contain a meaning, are bad pictures.” So holds Gerhard Richter, the art world’s great poet of uncertainty... more »
When his "theory of the firm" went bust, the economist Michael Jensen needed a scapegoat. He found one in basic human irrationality... more »
Rebecca Solnit’s writing hits broad feminist notes, avoiding anything difficult or controversial. No one disagrees with her — which is a problem... more »
Thoreau showed how the telegraph could alter our sense of time and space. Howard Axelrod shows us what that alteration now looks like... more »
To Richard Russo, time spent arguing over cultural appropriation might be better spent extolling the triumphs of the literary imagination... more »
We have developed an ill-advised self-seriousness about the novel — so much so, says Dave Eggers, that we have overlooked one of the wittiest books ever written... more »
Literary culture is tactile, embedded in our social environment. When cities go quiet, and intellectual life happens remotely, much is lost... more »
Do aphorisms convey wisdom or merely impersonate it? For Plato, they were enigmatic evasions — the scattered utterances of clever men... more »
After the pandemic. Bill McKibben, Noam Chomsky, and others try forecasting a dark future... more »
A culinary mystery: Vinaigrette has been hailed as a triumph of French culture — but is its origin actually Italian?... more »
"The trolley-problem problem." Thought experiments are as old as philosophy itself, but are they a useful way to reason about ethics?... more »
As an experience and an idea, solitude is no simple matter. It is both a necessary refuge and a public health menace... more »
Success requires flirting with the public, said George Bernard Shaw. He was more accomplished as a flirt than as a playwright... more »
László Földényi leads an assault on rationalism. In his prosecutorial zeal, is he missing the bigger picture?... more »
The value of science as a credential seems stronger than ever. Is this ubiquity a symptom of its decline?... more »
John Cage stroking bits of wire, Leonard Bernstein conducting Beethoven’s Ninth: The strangely addictive joy of classical YouTube... more »
The rise of individualism is linked to that of infectious diseases. Leo Robson traces the inevitable effect on literature... more »
For Locke and Rousseau, home schooling was ideal. For many parents now, not so much. What’s the basis of a moral education?... more »
The impulse to compare contemporary political events to the past lives on. But such analogies hinder more than they help... more »
Greil Marcus isn’t afraid, as one reader put it, to let “everything remind him of everything else.” It's both a gift and a liability... more »
“Art breathes from containments and suffocates from freedom,” said Leonardo da Vinci. Contemporary art is suffocating... more »
During London’s Great Plague, Samuel Pepys was resigned to his fate yet found much to rejoice in. Pandemics are complicated... more »
Heiner Müller was a poet, playwright, and Stasi informant. The messiness of his life speaks to the complexity of postwar Germany... more »
Critics once assessed the value of books. Now they use reviews as opportunities to showcase their erudition... more »
According to Peter Turchin and others in cliodynamics, historical material can be used to predict the future. Historians are skeptical... more »
Fiction is no good in a crisis, and it dislikes confronting world events head-on. So you'll have to wait for that coronavirus novel... more »
“Thou art a boil / A plague-sore, or embossed carbuncle.” Shakespeare didn’t write much about the bubonic plague, but it did provide good insult material... more »
The word "nostalgia" did not originally mean what it means now. It was coined with a longing for a time when there was no word for what it described... more »
Our reading problem. Yes, we shouldn't idealize the past. But that doesn't mean we have no crisis in the present... more »
The new, quarantined normal means getting closer with your family — too close, in many cases. Agnes Callard explains... more »
“The secret of black intellectuals is that we have other interests.” Darryl Pinckney, Margo Jefferson, and others discuss race and intellectual life... more »
To George Will, conservatism is “more than an attitude and less than an agenda.” It's a way of thinking, not a slate of principles and policies... more »
John Carey has always been a strange critic: an anti-elitist don, avuncular but deadly, amiable yet formidable... more »
Amid the current crisis, memorizing a poem can be a potent talisman — a charm or a balm to help us through this dry, brittle season... more »
In seeking a New Canaan, the Puritans were deeply influenced by the Jewish notion of chosenness. Roger Williams — who rejected this idea — was even exiled... more »
Leaving the academy isn’t easy — especially when you’re drawn partially back in. Spectral conference sightings may result. Lucia Tang explains... more »
Clive James and John Burnside could hardly be more different, except in this: Both are masters of appreciation and models of the poet/critic... more »
Critics fixate on the role of empire in Conrad’s work. For Fredric Jameson, something else — the invention of the steamboat — reveals more... more »
The origins of Shakespearomania. His reputation as an artist of genius was essentially an 18th-century creation... more »
For Manet, in art “you must constantly remain the master and do as you please. No tasks! No, no tasks!” And yet art is a task... more »
Previous epidemics might have prepared us for Covid-19 — if only their histories were better remembered and their victims duly honored. We could have been more like Venice, a city defined by disease... more »
Being friends with Philip Roth. He possessed the terrible gift of intimacy, causing people to tell him things they told no one else... more »
"Cocaine for the masses." The growth of a coffee culture has been trailed, and sometimes advanced, by a coffee literature... more »
Withdrawing from the public leads some artists, like Thomas Pynchon, to fame — and others, like Lee Bontecou, to obscurity... more »
Oxford University Press is a leading publisher. Why has it allowed the pseudo-scientific distortion of Shakespeare's canon?... more »
The Plague is Camus’s tale of illness and quarantine, yes, but its moral is one of inoculation through shared consciousness... more »
Sartre’s Stalinism. His relationship with the grislier aspects of the Soviet regime aren’t as black and white as his critics make out... more »
In the pantheon of Western critics of Communism, George Orwell and Raymond Aron have privileged perches. Rebecca West deserves a spot alongside them... more »
The Naipaul conundrum. What makes him uniquely insightful is intimately connected to what makes him so problematic... more »
“Liberal” is a slippery term that can mean almost anything. It’s also a crucial political weapon, writes Michael Walzer... more »
A global catastrophe has forced a huge, literate, internet-savvy population indoors. This is a test for humanists. Why are so many failing?... more »
A bad book gets a second chance. Vivian Gornick’s history of American communism was praised by none and vilified by all. Now, decades later, it’s caught on... more »
What pulses through the literature of pandemics is the body itself. "The world both narrows and broadens into the body’s suffering”... more »
Was a Ukrainian town overrun by wolves after the arrival of Soviets troops? Paul Auster investigates, with poetic assistance Reply Forward... more »
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