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Saturday April 10, 2021
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Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »
April 10, 2021

Articles of Note

A film maudit, French for a cursed film, is one that is widely panned but staunchly defended by a devoted few ... more »


New Books

Do terrible photographs make us feel real empathy, or make us more apathetic toward misery? ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Prompted by the growing risks of art, says Anthony Julius, new fears deform the creative decisions of writers and artists  ... more »


April 9, 2021

Articles of Note

In 2002, Maya Angelou set out to master the two-sentence epigram. She had a deal with Hallmark    ... more »


New Books

The New Journalism style long ago gave way to the cult of the personal essay. Rachel Kushner is bringing it back  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Everything that was once considered lowbrow is now triumphant. It's been decades since anyone has felt guilt about a guilty pleasure  ... more »


April 8, 2021

Articles of Note

“About 40 years old, 175cm tall, slender, with an elongated face, black thinning hair, light-rimmed glasses": Philip Roth's Czech KGB file... more »


New Books

Consider the strongman. Ruth Ben-Ghiat’s new book on dictators elides the political and cultural conditions that allow for their rise   ... more »


Essays & Opinions

You can write poems about sex or excrement, but not business or money. Those are the only two obscene topics left. Dana Gioia explains... more »


April 7, 2021

Articles of Note

Giancarlo DiTrapano, founder of Tyrant Books, has died. He published works no one else would publish, from the edges of American life  ... more »


New Books

Stephen Hawking’s elusive character, revealed: self-promoting to the point of arrogance, and heedless of what others might think  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Zora Neale Hurston was the Harlem Renaissance’s greatest internal critic. But she found her voice in the swampy muck of Florida  ... more »


April 6, 2021

Articles of Note

We used to fear unpredictable robots we could not restrain. Now we worry about using machines to restrain unpredictable humans... more »


New Books

In Peter the Great's Russia, the bureaucracy was all. And no one chronicled its pompous, careerist, status-obsessed types better than Nikolai Gogol... more »


Essays & Opinions

In American education, student freedom is brought low by two systems: meritocracy and narratives of overcoming oppression... more »


April 5, 2021

Articles of Note

Midnight's Children at 40: "For a writer in his mid-70s, the continued health of a book published in his mid-30s is, quite simply, a delight"  ... more »


New Books

Intimacy was not Helen Frankenthaler's strong suit. She could be insensitive, manipulative, obtuse, competitive, and mercilessly self-absorbed... more »


Essays & Opinions

Shakespeare has been studied in high schools in 1870 and still bestrides the curriculum like a colossus. That turns kids off literature... more »


April 3, 2021

Articles of Note

"War to war, wife to wife, novel to novel." Hemingway's most constant mistress, says James Parker, "may have been concussion"  ... more »


New Books

For Hebrew to become a modern language, it first had to become a flexible instrument, a religious language put in the service of a secular literature ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Robert Lowell's early work is a reminder that most young poets are terrible until suddenly they’re not  ... more »


April 2, 2021

Articles of Note

Of all the racist, sexist, classist things children are exposed to, says Katha Pollitt, decades-old children’s books are low on the list ... more »


New Books

The first musical note on earth was sounded 165 million years ago. It was an E natural. What did our ancestors use music for? ... more »


Essays & Opinions

American academics are not smuggling radical ideas into France. Rather, Macron is using universities as a pawn in his anti-Islamic campaign  ... more »


April 1, 2021

Articles of Note

"The unmet demand for a traditional humanities education in elite universities is increasingly being supplied by offshore institutions” ... more »


New Books

Though sometimes celebrated by liberals, cognitive meritocracy has eroded social solidarity, increased inequality, and precipitated right-wing populism  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Naomi Wolf is now a fringe thinker and Covid conspiracist. But what about her celebrated feminist work? It’s a mess, too  ... more »


March 31, 2021

Articles of Note

Was Foucault abusing children in Tunisia in the late 1960s? A sordid story makes the rounds in Paris  ... more »


New Books

Covid-19 is “the great reset,” argues a new book — humane, techno-elite Davos Men will save the day. Cue the nightmare scenarios  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Art is one response when tragedy strikes, but the critic can offer only meek condolences. Is that enough?  ... more »


March 30, 2021

Articles of Note

As early as 1957, Philip Larkin noted, poetry was losing its audience. The situation is worse now. Why don’t readers care?... more »


New Books

Joyce, Picasso — when we think of Modernism, we often think of men. But as a new book shows, there may well have been no Modernism without lesbians... more »


Essays & Opinions

David Sloan Wilson marshals evolutionary research to challenge the gospel of individualism. He has come to bury the ideas of Ayn Rand... more »


March 29, 2021

Articles of Note

Paul Theroux at 79. "I was once a hotshot, I was once the punk. And anyone who has once been a punk, eventually you're older, and you see the turning of the years as it is"  ... more »


New Books

Derrida's insights are fundamental to many fields: literature, law, film theory, theology. But he was a specialist in a subfield of his own design  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Secular critics of Marilynne Robinson focus on grace, family, and redemption, as if her Christianity were nothing more than kindness  ... more »


March 27, 2021

Articles of Note

Can a white person translate a Black poet? A fracas has broken out over identity and the translation of Amanda Gorman’s “The Hill We Climb”  ... more »


New Books

The semicolon is odd but impressive, the interrobang a good idea that never got traction. The hashtag was dead until some guy at Twitter revived it ... more »


Essays & Opinions

“Trauma,” “depression,” “triggers” — clinical therapy-speak is now everywhere. Is that a good thing?   ... more »


March 26, 2021

Articles of Note

The mess at Medium. As the company’s latest “pivot” suggests, billionaires’ whims and sustainable journalism aren’t always compatible   ... more »


New Books

The power of Elena Ferrante’s fiction is in chaos and terror — a magma of dread that infuses her novels with energy... more »


Essays & Opinions

“Today’s academy is in the business of producing at best detritus, at worst excrement, all fated to be swept away”   ... more »


March 25, 2021

Articles of Note

Falsification promises to help us separate science from pseudoscience. Only one problem: it doesn't work very well  ... more »


New Books

What Van Gogh read. "For him, it was not important to physically possess books, but to make them his own."  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

There is something mildly shameful about literary pilgrimages. They are a kind of emotional and intellectual junk food. And yet...  ... more »


March 24, 2021

Articles of Note

The cadaver known as Harriet Cole — a representation of the nervous system — is a product of anatomical bravado. But where did Harriet come from?... more »


New Books

Frantz Fanon has become a near-mythical figure in antiracist discourse. The cost of that achievement: a watering down of his political commitments... more »


Essays & Opinions

Evelyn Waugh on being interviewed by Jacques Barzun: “They sent me an apostate frog called professor Smart-Aleck Baboon. He... gave me a viva in history”   ... more »


March 23, 2021

Articles of Note

Forget traditional majors — the humanities should organize itself around modules like Social Justice, Migration Studies, and The Problem of God   ... more »


New Books

As Isaiah Berlin put it, “Total liberty for wolves is death to the lambs.” Indeed, the history of the idea of freedom is one of paradox and contradiction   ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Philip Roth ensured that he had an extremely sympathetic biographer. But in the resulting biography, he still comes across as a spiteful obsessive... more »


March 22, 2021

Articles of Note

The handshake, past and future. The gesture is so culturally fundamental that something important will be lost if it disappears  ... more »


New Books

If life exists on any of the Milky Way’s other 100 billion planets, Darwinian selection would be at work there, too ... more »


Essays & Opinions

The birth of the audiobook dates to the 19th century, when Tennyson and Browning recorded poems for phonographs  ... more »


March 20, 2021

Articles of Note

Edward Said’s Orientalism started a politics of blame that rapidly spread in the academy. He spent decades trying to stanch it  ... more »


New Books

Helen Frankenthaler and the mainstreaming of the avant-garde. In 1950s New York, painting's culture looked like pop culture  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

The new literary moralism. Is this frenzy for censure and the expansion of the definition of harm how we’ll correct the inequities of our time?  ... more »


March 19, 2021

Articles of Note

Alfred Hitchcock was afraid of policemen, strangers, driving, solitude, crowds, heights, water, and conflict. Fear was his creative fuel  ... more »


New Books

While autofiction asserts a kind of apolitical license, the bar for ethical fiction keeps getting higher and higher  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Polymaths are one thing, freaks of intellect quite another. Even reading about these monsters of learning can leave one exhausted  ... more »


March 18, 2021

Articles of Note

Jane Cornwell was far more than a typist; she was John le Carré's first editor and indispensable collaborator  ... more »


New Books

Defending Derrida against his critics is easier than defending him against his followers  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

From the Aztecs' “divine food” to the 18th-century smoke enema, the history of smoking is odder than typically presented ... more »




Articles of Note

A film maudit, French for a cursed film, is one that is widely panned but staunchly defended by a devoted few ... more »


In 2002, Maya Angelou set out to master the two-sentence epigram. She had a deal with Hallmark    ... more »


“About 40 years old, 175cm tall, slender, with an elongated face, black thinning hair, light-rimmed glasses": Philip Roth's Czech KGB file... more »


Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »

Giancarlo DiTrapano, founder of Tyrant Books, has died. He published works no one else would publish, from the edges of American life  ... more »


We used to fear unpredictable robots we could not restrain. Now we worry about using machines to restrain unpredictable humans... more »


Midnight's Children at 40: "For a writer in his mid-70s, the continued health of a book published in his mid-30s is, quite simply, a delight"  ... more »


"War to war, wife to wife, novel to novel." Hemingway's most constant mistress, says James Parker, "may have been concussion"  ... more »


Of all the racist, sexist, classist things children are exposed to, says Katha Pollitt, decades-old children’s books are low on the list ... more »


"The unmet demand for a traditional humanities education in elite universities is increasingly being supplied by offshore institutions” ... more »


Was Foucault abusing children in Tunisia in the late 1960s? A sordid story makes the rounds in Paris  ... more »


As early as 1957, Philip Larkin noted, poetry was losing its audience. The situation is worse now. Why don’t readers care?... more »


Paul Theroux at 79. "I was once a hotshot, I was once the punk. And anyone who has once been a punk, eventually you're older, and you see the turning of the years as it is"  ... more »


Can a white person translate a Black poet? A fracas has broken out over identity and the translation of Amanda Gorman’s “The Hill We Climb”  ... more »


The mess at Medium. As the company’s latest “pivot” suggests, billionaires’ whims and sustainable journalism aren’t always compatible   ... more »


Falsification promises to help us separate science from pseudoscience. Only one problem: it doesn't work very well  ... more »


The cadaver known as Harriet Cole — a representation of the nervous system — is a product of anatomical bravado. But where did Harriet come from?... more »


Forget traditional majors — the humanities should organize itself around modules like Social Justice, Migration Studies, and The Problem of God   ... more »


The handshake, past and future. The gesture is so culturally fundamental that something important will be lost if it disappears  ... more »


Edward Said’s Orientalism started a politics of blame that rapidly spread in the academy. He spent decades trying to stanch it  ... more »


Alfred Hitchcock was afraid of policemen, strangers, driving, solitude, crowds, heights, water, and conflict. Fear was his creative fuel  ... more »


Jane Cornwell was far more than a typist; she was John le Carré's first editor and indispensable collaborator  ... more »


Jessica Krug, Rachel Dolezal — lefty academics’ identity hoaxing may involve trading mundane traumas for grander narratives of oppression   ... more »


Music unheard and books unread are an affront to our sense of hope and the individualistic tenor of our age  ... more »


We remember Charlotte Perkins Gilman as a pioneering feminist, a social reformer. But look closer and you’ll see a Victorian white nationalist   ... more »


In 1883, fragments of the "original" Book of Deuteronomy were declared a fraud. But what if this notorious fake is real?  ... more »


George Saunders is the prince of the M.F.A. age. Key to his literary stardom and his writerly talents is his relatability  ... more »


Daryl Michael Scott, critic of the 1619 project and of Ava DuVernay’s film 13th: “Bad history and worse social science have replaced truth”... more »


The paradox of Orientalism: While Edward Said's book castigated imperialism, it also weakened the anti-imperialist intellectual project... more »


The idea that people on their deathbeds gain a clearer view of what matters has a distinguished philosophical pedigree. That doesn't mean it's true  ... more »


Carl Hart has used heroin regularly for years. “I am an unapologetic drug user,” says the Columbia University psychology professor  ... more »


Paul Valéry hobnobbed with princesses, ministers, and scientists. By the 1930s, he was France’s poetic stuffed shirt extraordinaire ... more »


Originalism’s original sin. The judicial philosophy is best understood not in a legal context, but as an extension of biblical literalism  ... more »


Two of the largest U.S. publishers want to merge. How many imprints will fold? How many jobs will be lost? ... more »


Jordan Petersen is rich, famous, and unhappy. His anxiety landed him in a Russian hospital. Now he's back from breakdown  ... more »


Sherry Turkle, MIT’s “one-woman emergency empathy squad,” is a critic of technology amid its evangelists...more... more »


The tragic legacy of “comfort women” has divided South Korea and Japan for decades. Enter the dubious claims of a Harvard law professor  ... more »


Parul Sehgal read 125 years of writing in The New York Times Book Review. She found mostly a dearth of style and a failure of criticism... more »


The book blurb requires too much work and induces too much guilt. As Viet Thanh Nguyen says, “Kill it. Bury it. Dance on its grave.”... more »


What happens when race, class, and power collide at an elite liberal-arts college? No one emerges unscathed  ... more »


No human invention has destroyed the civilization that invented it. We haven't been careful or wise — just lucky  ... more »


New Books

Do terrible photographs make us feel real empathy, or make us more apathetic toward misery? ... more »


The New Journalism style long ago gave way to the cult of the personal essay. Rachel Kushner is bringing it back  ... more »


Consider the strongman. Ruth Ben-Ghiat’s new book on dictators elides the political and cultural conditions that allow for their rise   ... more »


Stephen Hawking’s elusive character, revealed: self-promoting to the point of arrogance, and heedless of what others might think  ... more »


In Peter the Great's Russia, the bureaucracy was all. And no one chronicled its pompous, careerist, status-obsessed types better than Nikolai Gogol... more »


Intimacy was not Helen Frankenthaler's strong suit. She could be insensitive, manipulative, obtuse, competitive, and mercilessly self-absorbed... more »


For Hebrew to become a modern language, it first had to become a flexible instrument, a religious language put in the service of a secular literature ... more »


The first musical note on earth was sounded 165 million years ago. It was an E natural. What did our ancestors use music for? ... more »


Though sometimes celebrated by liberals, cognitive meritocracy has eroded social solidarity, increased inequality, and precipitated right-wing populism  ... more »


Covid-19 is “the great reset,” argues a new book — humane, techno-elite Davos Men will save the day. Cue the nightmare scenarios  ... more »


Joyce, Picasso — when we think of Modernism, we often think of men. But as a new book shows, there may well have been no Modernism without lesbians... more »


Derrida's insights are fundamental to many fields: literature, law, film theory, theology. But he was a specialist in a subfield of his own design  ... more »


The semicolon is odd but impressive, the interrobang a good idea that never got traction. The hashtag was dead until some guy at Twitter revived it ... more »


The power of Elena Ferrante’s fiction is in chaos and terror — a magma of dread that infuses her novels with energy... more »


What Van Gogh read. "For him, it was not important to physically possess books, but to make them his own."  ... more »


Frantz Fanon has become a near-mythical figure in antiracist discourse. The cost of that achievement: a watering down of his political commitments... more »


As Isaiah Berlin put it, “Total liberty for wolves is death to the lambs.” Indeed, the history of the idea of freedom is one of paradox and contradiction   ... more »


If life exists on any of the Milky Way’s other 100 billion planets, Darwinian selection would be at work there, too ... more »


Helen Frankenthaler and the mainstreaming of the avant-garde. In 1950s New York, painting's culture looked like pop culture  ... more »


While autofiction asserts a kind of apolitical license, the bar for ethical fiction keeps getting higher and higher  ... more »


Defending Derrida against his critics is easier than defending him against his followers  ... more »


One of Francis Bacon’s lovers burned down his studio; another threw him out of a second story window. For Bacon, pain was indicative of true emotion ... more »


Novels are increasingly autobiographical, which puts reading at the risk of becoming a tiresome test of authenticity  ... more »


Will the pandemic hasten the use of gene-editing technology? Engineering our bodies to resist disease might not sound so radical right now   ... more »


John Keats and F. Scott Fitzgerald were two men who struggled to make it as writers. Does the connection go deeper?  ... more »


Life is awful, or so said the cynical and perhaps nihilistic Graham Greene. But art — that could at least make life seem worthwhile ... more »


Does the future of postcolonial thought necessitate a return to Indigenous epistemologies, or can at least some modernist ideas be salvaged?   ... more »


Humanists should be skeptical of our increasingly analytical world. Unfortunately, Lev Manovich’s new book is full of gee-whiz-ism   ... more »


A sense of so-called “decency” long kept women out of art studios. Indeed, the history of art is "the history of many women not receiving their dues”  ... more »


Robin Dunbar’s science of friendship: Human beings can sustain at most 150 acquaintances, of which only five are intimate  ... more »


The White Operation. For decades, Dr. Robert J. White pursued his quest: to transplant a human head. He came close ... more »


High society in interwar England: late nights, hangovers, petty insecurities, ghastly conversation, and fascist sympathies  ... more »


Soviet shame culture. The party constantly invented new mistakes. One could never be free from the risk of humiliation — or worse ... more »


How do we pin down an artist who has meant so many things to so many people? The revolutionary contradictions of Richard Wagner... more »


What can we learn from Philip Roth, master careerist? Lawyer up early, listen to critics while scorning them publicly, sell out whenever possible  ... more »


What Freud got right. According to a new book, his ideas weren’t just ahead of his time — they are ahead of ours  ... more »


At a white-tie ball in 1949, a tipsy Princess Margaret belted out a tune and was greeted by "thunderous booing." It was Francis Bacon... more »


René Girard’s one-liners: Nietzsche was “so wrong that in some ways he’s right”; Sartre was “too even-keeled to become a true genius”... more »


More people than ever are sending photos of themselves naked. The pleasures and perils of the nude selfie... more »


Essays & Opinions

Prompted by the growing risks of art, says Anthony Julius, new fears deform the creative decisions of writers and artists  ... more »


Everything that was once considered lowbrow is now triumphant. It's been decades since anyone has felt guilt about a guilty pleasure  ... more »


You can write poems about sex or excrement, but not business or money. Those are the only two obscene topics left. Dana Gioia explains... more »


Zora Neale Hurston was the Harlem Renaissance’s greatest internal critic. But she found her voice in the swampy muck of Florida  ... more »


In American education, student freedom is brought low by two systems: meritocracy and narratives of overcoming oppression... more »


Shakespeare has been studied in high schools in 1870 and still bestrides the curriculum like a colossus. That turns kids off literature... more »


Robert Lowell's early work is a reminder that most young poets are terrible until suddenly they’re not  ... more »


American academics are not smuggling radical ideas into France. Rather, Macron is using universities as a pawn in his anti-Islamic campaign  ... more »


Naomi Wolf is now a fringe thinker and Covid conspiracist. But what about her celebrated feminist work? It’s a mess, too  ... more »


Art is one response when tragedy strikes, but the critic can offer only meek condolences. Is that enough?  ... more »


David Sloan Wilson marshals evolutionary research to challenge the gospel of individualism. He has come to bury the ideas of Ayn Rand... more »


Secular critics of Marilynne Robinson focus on grace, family, and redemption, as if her Christianity were nothing more than kindness  ... more »


“Trauma,” “depression,” “triggers” — clinical therapy-speak is now everywhere. Is that a good thing?   ... more »


“Today’s academy is in the business of producing at best detritus, at worst excrement, all fated to be swept away”   ... more »


There is something mildly shameful about literary pilgrimages. They are a kind of emotional and intellectual junk food. And yet...  ... more »


Evelyn Waugh on being interviewed by Jacques Barzun: “They sent me an apostate frog called professor Smart-Aleck Baboon. He... gave me a viva in history”   ... more »


Philip Roth ensured that he had an extremely sympathetic biographer. But in the resulting biography, he still comes across as a spiteful obsessive... more »


The birth of the audiobook dates to the 19th century, when Tennyson and Browning recorded poems for phonographs  ... more »


The new literary moralism. Is this frenzy for censure and the expansion of the definition of harm how we’ll correct the inequities of our time?  ... more »


Polymaths are one thing, freaks of intellect quite another. Even reading about these monsters of learning can leave one exhausted  ... more »


From the Aztecs' “divine food” to the 18th-century smoke enema, the history of smoking is odder than typically presented ... more »


A consensus has emerged on the right and the left, among the regressive populists and the progressive populists: liberals are the villains... more »


Literary studies argues wrong. Because scholars value critical style over substance, academic culture grows misguided  ... more »


Many people are committed to the idea that they’re biologically superior. Does social-science genetics give them scientific cover?   ... more »


Being overshadowed by genius has destroyed many literary careers. For the Canadian critic Robert Fulford, something like the opposite occurred  ... more »


College admissions is one of the few situations in which it’s rich people scrambling for a scarce resource. The result: our insane system of private schools... more »


Liberal and center-left political parties — once champions of the working class — have become home to meritocrats, hence the party of the new aristocracy... more »


When Robert Lowell left Elizabeth Hardwick for Caroline Blackwood and England, Hardwick decried his infidelity — both to her and to American literature   ... more »


Remember the televangelists? We now have the Instavangelists, hawking a blend of self-care, wellness, astrology, and left-wing politics  ... more »


Lolita’s greatest champion? Véra Nabokov. She saved it from fire and thought to publish it abroad, decrying domestic “strait-laced morality”  ... more »


The French journal Le Débat is no more. Cause of death? American social theory. How the intellectual tides have turned   ... more »


Camus, metereologist. At the Algiers Geophysics Institute, he grew increasingly disenchanted: “Observation here represents an arbitrary slice of reality”  ... more »


Harold Bloom’s final books reveal that he was never the cosmopolitan we took him to be. Rather, his work is a beautiful, narrow province  ... more »


We disagree not just over values and facts, but also over our very standards for determining what the facts are... more »


"Americans’ dogmatism about democracy strengthens their attachment to it," says Mark Lilla, "but it weakens their understanding of it"  ... more »


A social movement has successfully pushed the idea that people get to choose their own pronoun. How will things look a decade from now? ... more »


Wealthy colleges talk a lot about equity. But a chasm exists between symbolic gestures and real social progress  ... more »


Psychoanalysis and the novel. Authors and analysts are repositories of insight about our motives and behaviors   ... more »


Dear Abby, Dear Prudence, Ask Polly - we've reached Peak Advice. But are readers getting anything from all the edification?  ... more »


“The right advice to an ‘Unhappily Married Woman’ is not to tell her to imagine having sex with a different man, but as a different woman”  ... more »


Andy Owen went to war certain that he was advancing the cause of progress. He found a necessary rebuke in the work of John Gray... more »


In our time of plague, a cast of literary oracles has emerged: Camus, Defoe, Saramago. But in feeling trapped, Kafka is paramount... more »


In literary studies, melodrama reigns as paranoia is pitted against repair, violence against nurture, suspicion against trust   ... more »


Most anti-Semites hate Jews for what they imagine Jews to be. T.S. Eliot, by contrast, hated Jews for what they really are ... more »


"At 43 I constantly feel out of place with you. I have all the wrong thoughts and desires." A writer breaks up with his writing career... more »


Can you be traumatized by a secondhand experience? For historians of humankind’s darkest chapters, the answer appears to be “yes”... more »


Loving literature can be an entrée to the academic world. Such passion can also imprison you in academe’s broken system  ... more »


Every generation of artists has its problems with museums. Museums were once too corporate. Now they are “carceral and colonial, and thus ableist”   ... more »


Forget lords and ladies - the true history of the Middle Ages is found in legal accounts of peasants' crimes, conflicts, and inheritances  ... more »


Avoid oversimplification, question metaphors, stop talking in slogans — so urges a little book from the 1930s, a user’s manual for the mind... more »


Nota Bene

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