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Friday June 5, 2020
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Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »
June 5, 2020

Articles of Note

Orwell, Pasternak, Hemingway, Greene: Remembering a time when literature was a weapon of cultural warfare... more »


New Books

Dickens’s fiction drew on the most painful secrets of his life. His gift: turning insecurity into a creative asset... more »


Essays & Opinions

To Richard Russo, time spent arguing over cultural appropriation might be better spent extolling the triumphs of the literary imagination... more »


June 4, 2020

Articles of Note

We celebrate the Renaissance, but consider this: The period contributed very little to innovation in science... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


June 3, 2020

Articles of Note

Two things guide Barbara Ehrenreich: anger and curiosity. "I live for surprises”... more »


New Books

The key to understanding the modern human mind is found in the ancient hunter myths. Or so says Roberto Calasso... more »


Essays & Opinions

Literary culture is tactile, embedded in our social environment. When cities go quiet, and intellectual life happens remotely, much is lost... more »


June 2, 2020

Articles of Note

Caravan, a little magazine in India, analyzes the news with “adversarial politics.” Bring on the harassment, defamation suits, and sleepless nights... more »


New Books

The meaning of doubt. "Unbelief needs the believer’s reflecting gaze to better understand itself"... more »


Essays & Opinions

Do aphorisms convey wisdom or merely impersonate it? For Plato, they were enigmatic evasions — the scattered utterances of clever men... more »


June 1, 2020

Articles of Note

What was it like to sit in the Thomaskirche in 1723 and hear Bach’s music the way that Bach heard it?... more »


New Books

Lydia Davis is a writer for whom the subject is always, on some level, writing itself... more »


Essays & Opinions

After the pandemic. Bill McKibben, Noam Chomsky, and others try forecasting a dark future... more »


May 30, 2020

Articles of Note

How to steal a Van Gogh: "Talk smooth, be cool, have a fast car, and never touch anyone”... more »


New Books

John Rawls’s work can take on the quality of a sacred text. Was his appeal related to the declining status of Christianity?... more »


Essays & Opinions

A culinary mystery: Vinaigrette has been hailed as a triumph of French culture — but is its origin actually Italian?... more »


May 29, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

Martin Hägglund’s philosophical blockbuster, This Life, has been widely lauded. Yet for such a liberating text, it’s stunningly parochial... more »


Essays & Opinions

"The trolley-problem problem." Thought experiments are as old as philosophy itself, but are they a useful way to reason about ethics?... more »


May 28, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

For some “intellectually displaced” women in the 1960s, a haven beckoned — the Radcliffe Institute, feminism’s first think tank... more »


Essays & Opinions

As an experience and an idea, solitude is no simple matter. It is both a necessary refuge and a public health menace... more »


May 27, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

The world is turbulent and tragic, while philosophers are cool and rational. Their field would gain so much if they could be moved... more »


Essays & Opinions

Success requires flirting with the public, said George Bernard Shaw. He was more accomplished as a flirt than as a playwright... more »


May 26, 2020

Articles of Note

Why do we use categories — fantasy, literary, gothic — to describe novels? Tim Parks proposes a new taxonomy... more »


New Books

From Knausgaard to Lerner to Heti, we’re plagued by goodness — as if readers were scandalized by immoral characters in fiction... more »


Essays & Opinions

László Földényi leads an assault on rationalism. In his prosecutorial zeal, is he missing the bigger picture?... more »


May 25, 2020

Articles of Note

How well do we know Philip Roth? Too well? Or not well enough? Let’s check his archive... more »


New Books

Coffee, “the most grateful lubricant of the human machine,” has made — and destroyed — entire societies... more »


Essays & Opinions

The value of science as a credential seems stronger than ever. Is this ubiquity a symptom of its decline?... more »


May 23, 2020

Articles of Note

Everyone wants a glimpse of the post-Covid world, so the public square is thick with prophets. Ignore them... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

John Cage stroking bits of wire, Leonard Bernstein conducting Beethoven’s Ninth: The strangely addictive joy of classical YouTube... more »


May 22, 2020

Articles of Note

We know Raphael as a painter, but his life might have turned out far differently — he was also a formidable architect... more »


New Books

The art critic Hal Foster separated “good” from “bad” postmodernism. How real is that distinction?... more »


Essays & Opinions

The rise of individualism is linked to that of infectious diseases. Leo Robson traces the inevitable effect on literature... more »


May 21, 2020

Articles of Note

Behind Kepler’s discoveries was remarkable data compiled by Tycho Brahe, a fierce astronomer with an artificial golden nose... more »


New Books

With his puncturing of ideology and his wild, hallucinatory tales, Robert Stone reshaped what the American crime thriller could be... more »


Essays & Opinions

For Locke and Rousseau, home schooling was ideal. For many parents now, not so much. What’s the basis of a moral education?... more »


May 20, 2020

Articles of Note

It's a trope of science fiction that machines will become human-like. The real threat: Humans will become machine-like... more »


New Books

Shame is about dishonor, vulnerability, and disgrace. It's also a tool of politics and power... more »


Essays & Opinions

The impulse to compare contemporary political events to the past lives on. But such analogies hinder more than they help... more »


May 19, 2020

Articles of Note

“What conditions are necessary for the creation of works of art?” Virginia Woolf’s question has always been thorny for women... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


May 18, 2020

Articles of Note

What did Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Walter Benjamin read? One woman was keeping track... more »


New Books

Clive James was perhaps Philip Larkin's best reader. But his Larkin is a projection — the poet that James wanted to be... more »


Essays & Opinions

“Art breathes from containments and suffocates from freedom,” said Leonardo da Vinci. Contemporary art is suffocating... more »


May 16, 2020

Articles of Note

Love and theft. How a stolen de Kooning ended up in the master bedroom of a pink stucco house in New Mexico... more »


New Books

There are lots of supposed polymaths. They’re brilliant in one field, but mediocre in others. True polymaths are rare... more »


Essays & Opinions

During London’s Great Plague, Samuel Pepys was resigned to his fate yet found much to rejoice in. Pandemics are complicated... more »


May 15, 2020

Articles of Note

Magical mummy masks; the “finding” of a first-century fragment — why was the world’s leading papyrologist involved in such shenanigans?... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

Heiner Müller was a poet, playwright, and Stasi informant. The messiness of his life speaks to the complexity of postwar Germany... more »


May 14, 2020

Articles of Note

Deep-speare is a computer that composes poetry. But an original sonnet isn’t necessarily a good sonnet... more »


New Books

When Henry James and Robert Louis Stevenson met, they debated the nature of fiction and griped about — what else? — money... more »


Essays & Opinions

Critics once assessed the value of books. Now they use reviews as opportunities to showcase their erudition... more »


May 13, 2020

Articles of Note

Lexicographer extraordinaire, paragon of learning, purveyor of practical wisdom, Samuel Johnson was above all a moralist... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

According to Peter Turchin and others in cliodynamics, historical material can be used to predict the future. Historians are skeptical... more »




Articles of Note

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 »


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

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 »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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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