The rock biopic has a new job in the age of the financialization of music: produce, and reproduce, an audience... more »
Was Curzio Malaparte — nationalist and cosmopolite, pacifist and bellicist, elitist and populist — the quintessential European of his time?... more »
We seek rest, yet are wary of its implicit boredom. This dilemma is resolved, perhaps, only by cats... more »
Could the oldest writing system in the world be deciphered? Cuneiform persistently stumped scholars — until the 1850s... more »
“A book was like fresh air," said Adam Michnik. "They allowed us to survive and not go mad.” The CIA was deft at smuggling them behind the Iron Curtain... more »
The homogenous, aging American psychoanalytic community has begun emphasizing social injustice. The result: chaos... more »
“The nonagenarian writer should speak only of gratitude — and then shut up.” But not yet, if you’re Cynthia Ozick... more »
A rarefied gig. Has there ever been a more lucrative place to be a writer than Graydon Carter’s Vanity Fair?... more »
Hunter-gatherer societies were much more violent than our own, but much of that is due to a relatively small number of prehistoric psychopaths... more »
“Unfortunately the statistical evidence, at least for telepathy, is overwhelming.” So held Alan Turing in 1950... more »
The history of AI is dashed hopes and blind alleys. You don't have to be an “accelerationist” or a “doomer" to see that this time is different... more »
One early human tool gave rise to our leap in intelligence: not the sharpened stone, but the handbag, for carrying food and babies... more »
Daniel Kahneman was determined to create a happy ending to his 90 years of life, to avoid the indignities and miseries of age. He chose suicide... more »
House of Albert Barnes. What drove the curmudgeonly collector to acquire so many Renoirs, Cézannes and Modiglianis?... more »
For a powerful account of the human condition, writes Marilynne Robinson, turn not to “anemic anthropology,” but to Calvinism... more »
“Nature and nurture aren’t separate forces — they’re a Möbius strip, endlessly looping back on each other”... more »
Through binges, bankruptcies, and depressive spells, Edgar Allan Poe knew where the best of him lay: in making art... more »
Fairy tales are archetypal stories that seem to come from nowhere and to belong to everyone. This is an illusion... more »
How to spot a fake masterpiece. In the exposure of artistic forgeries, it's the little things that give them away... more »
In the 18th century, hypochondria was a rarefied disease tied to leisure and luxury. Then the laboring classes began to develop it... more »
Today we treat novels as salubrious stress relievers — kale smoothies for the soul. That overlooks their dark, diabolical potency... more »
Toni Morrison’s audacious Dreaming Emmett. She planned to take the play to Paris, but it lasted only four weeks in Albany... more »
Dante’s divine… autofiction? The Commedia is not a “memoir” in the conventional sense, yet it’s a deeply personal reflection... more »
The necessity of Martha Nussbaum. Her philosophy is never divorced from the messy, complex, and sometimes painful stuff of real life... more »
The horrors of early pet food. In Victorian London, “cat’s meat men” pushed their carts of cheap offal and horsemeat up to 40 miles a day... more »
Van Gogh, age 32, arrived in Paris a "provincial rube" and “painter of no particular skill." Did the city really transform him?... more »
Alice Gribbin: “Those who deem the nude in art a ‘sex object’ betray themselves as prudish and crass”... more »
Disease that spreads through the air? In the words of one journalist in France in the 1860s, that was “just too fantastic to imagine”... more »
“The only people who connect ancient and modern Greece are tour guides, Fulbright scholars, and fascists”... more »
What can the memoir of madness accomplish? It can force us to reckon with ugly things, not because they are titillating, but because they are true... more »
“I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.” Then came ChatGPT... more »
When it comes to sexual matters, the Bible is neither clear nor consistent. Diarmaid MacCulloch teases out the contradictions... more »
“The alternative to a recovery of the liberal imagination … may be neither illiberalism nor the neoliberal status quo but a new barbarism”... more »
“I have to prepare myself for a certain degree of loneliness.” In her 80s, Helen Garner focuses on her garden, her chickens, and her diary... more »
Many academics tolerate the metaphysical commitments of mainstream religionists. But a belief in the paranormal?... more »
Technology has long been a boon to creativity, especially in film. But AI and its machine-managed flawlessness are different... more »
As a utilitarian, Tyler Cowen believes that people do things for reasons. What’s his reason for wanting to know everything?... more »
Free speech and its discontents. “We cannot have truth and wisdom without accommodating error and folly”... more »
What is intuition? The return of a lost memory? An unearned sense of certitude? A physician deals with losing his decisiveness... more »
What Tom Wolfe wrought. Many journalists mimc his style. Few do the reporting that makes that style sing... more »
Here come the pedagogy gurus, with their gaseous abstractions and bureaucratic proceduralism... more »
A victim of his own accessibility. Montaigne’s writing is categorized as “motivational self-help.” Don’t be fooled... more »
Saudi Arabia’s pre-Islamic history, which it once condemned as idolatrous, is central to a new program encouraging tourism... more »
Experiencing an obscure, hyper-specific emotion? In some language, there’s probably a word for that... more »
Dave Eggers’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius was a “big, huge mistake,” but one we should be grateful for... more »
Most virtues come with no fine print, but the goodness of loyalty depends on its object. Vladimir Jankélévitch elaborated... more »
What is "woke"? An abundance of zeal, a lack of proportion, and self-interest masquerading as general interest... more »
Social science has a rigor problem, and the common solutions — replication, public critique — are inefficient. It’s time for a new approach... more »
Robert Caro has one sentence pinned to an index card above his Smith Corona Electra 210 typewriter: “The only thing that matters is on this page” ... more »
Stanley Fish goes to the movies. At 86, the "totalitarian Tinkerbell" is still at it, yoking legal theory to Hollywood production... more »
When Fukuyama’s “The End of History?” came out over 35 years ago, it was roundly mocked. But he’s been proven right... more »
Over time more species are seen as “intelligent” — dolphins, bees, and now, to some, even plants. Why?... more »
The debate over privacy has bogged down in stalemate between user agreements and opt-out buttons. We've lost sight of what privacy is for... more »
Perry Anderson asks: Why is neoliberalism more powerful and pervasive an ideology than the liberalism on which it rests?... more »
Decades before the internet, Harold Innis put his finger on a central paradox: Improvements in communication can make understanding more difficult... more »
Social psychology is a field in crisis. What’s the main problem: bad methods or bad ideas?... more »
A plague of bad essays purports to explain how some distant historical event explains the present. Beware such relevance mongering... more »
Among the hobbyists. They are often viewed as eccentric weirdos. They’re actually in the business of selling dreams... more »
A faithful pet, some liquor, books stacked just so — since Montaigne’s time the private library has been a place of quiet joy... more »
The supremacy of finitude: Our lives, our species, and our universe will all someday come to an end. That should galvanize us... more »
Modern refrigeration is a miracle but has its downsides: flavorless tomatoes; spinach devoid of vitamin C; slimy old lettuce... more »
As three recent books show, “arguing about criticism is far less pleasurable than arguing about books”... more »
If the universe offers us clues to its purpose, the reasonable thing to do is not just pay attention but believe. Ross Douthat’s case for religion... more »
The rock biopic has a new job in the age of the financialization of music: produce, and reproduce, an audience... more »
Could the oldest writing system in the world be deciphered? Cuneiform persistently stumped scholars — until the 1850s... more »
“The nonagenarian writer should speak only of gratitude — and then shut up.” But not yet, if you’re Cynthia Ozick... more »
“Unfortunately the statistical evidence, at least for telepathy, is overwhelming.” So held Alan Turing in 1950... more »
Daniel Kahneman was determined to create a happy ending to his 90 years of life, to avoid the indignities and miseries of age. He chose suicide... more »
“Nature and nurture aren’t separate forces — they’re a Möbius strip, endlessly looping back on each other”... more »
How to spot a fake masterpiece. In the exposure of artistic forgeries, it's the little things that give them away... more »
Toni Morrison’s audacious Dreaming Emmett. She planned to take the play to Paris, but it lasted only four weeks in Albany... more »
The horrors of early pet food. In Victorian London, “cat’s meat men” pushed their carts of cheap offal and horsemeat up to 40 miles a day... more »
Disease that spreads through the air? In the words of one journalist in France in the 1860s, that was “just too fantastic to imagine”... more »
“I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.” Then came ChatGPT... more »
“I have to prepare myself for a certain degree of loneliness.” In her 80s, Helen Garner focuses on her garden, her chickens, and her diary... more »
As a utilitarian, Tyler Cowen believes that people do things for reasons. What’s his reason for wanting to know everything?... more »
What Tom Wolfe wrought. Many journalists mimc his style. Few do the reporting that makes that style sing... more »
Saudi Arabia’s pre-Islamic history, which it once condemned as idolatrous, is central to a new program encouraging tourism... more »
Most virtues come with no fine print, but the goodness of loyalty depends on its object. Vladimir Jankélévitch elaborated... more »
Robert Caro has one sentence pinned to an index card above his Smith Corona Electra 210 typewriter: “The only thing that matters is on this page” ... more »
Over time more species are seen as “intelligent” — dolphins, bees, and now, to some, even plants. Why?... more »
Decades before the internet, Harold Innis put his finger on a central paradox: Improvements in communication can make understanding more difficult... more »
Among the hobbyists. They are often viewed as eccentric weirdos. They’re actually in the business of selling dreams... more »
Modern refrigeration is a miracle but has its downsides: flavorless tomatoes; spinach devoid of vitamin C; slimy old lettuce... more »
Simone de Beauvoir didn't meander or saunter. She hiked zealously, at a grueling pace. She walked not to think... more »
Literature in translation is a tough sell in the United States. Tilted Axis, a small press founded in London, is trying to change that... more »
For Jhumpa Lahiri, Ovid’s Metamorphoses has been a rock, "something to hold on to when the waves are swelling." Now her task is to alter it... more »
World War I ended Henri Bergson’s influence: As Georges Politzer put it, “Mr. Bergson is as yet still dying, but Bergsonism is in fact dead”... more »
How Janet Malcolm created "Janet Malcolm." But she wrestled with her reputation as decisive, pitiless, a "journalistic serial killer"... more »
What does mescaline do to the brain? The works of Henri Michaux, the French Jackson Pollock, supply an answer... more »
What if the solution to what ails the humanities is 10 days on an old farm in the Hudson Valley? Bill Deresiewicz explains... more »
Descartes, Kepler, Boyle, Newton — these titans of the Scientific Revolution are, in fact, not the intellectual forefathers of modern secularism... more »
Andrea Long Chu on Pamela Paul: “Her principal opinion is that everyone else’s opinions should be as weakly held as her own”... more »
"A children’s book is not a luxury good. It is fundamental to our culture, to the grown-ups we become, to the society we build"... more »
Sir Thomas More’s birthplace was very likely not fashionable Milk Street, but lawless “Cripplegate Without,” home to thieves, sex workers, and trash dumps... more »
Soliciting book blurbs is time-consuming, dispiriting, and occasionally mortifying. So Simon & Schuster is getting rid of them... more »
With intensity, earnestness, and a bougie aesthetic, McNally Jackson is reshaping literary life in New York... more »
The Gobi bear, the northern white rhinoceros: We talk about preserving species of animals. But what about preserving sub-species?... more »
Before Gloria Steinem fought the patriarchy, she wrote The Beach Book to “make you feel better about wasting time on the beach”... more »
The dead are universally respected but lack human rights. Should their bodies have legal protections? Which ones?... more »
Celebrities sign autographs with autopens, cursive is on the wane in schools — what does it mean to live without handwriting?... more »
The case of Alexander Berkman, 19th-century anarchist, illustrates that one man’s nihilistic terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter... more »
Sober at Bonaroo. Amid libertine carousing, “Soberoovians” chase catharsis — and transcendence... more »
Was Curzio Malaparte — nationalist and cosmopolite, pacifist and bellicist, elitist and populist — the quintessential European of his time?... more »
“A book was like fresh air," said Adam Michnik. "They allowed us to survive and not go mad.” The CIA was deft at smuggling them behind the Iron Curtain... more »
A rarefied gig. Has there ever been a more lucrative place to be a writer than Graydon Carter’s Vanity Fair?... more »
The history of AI is dashed hopes and blind alleys. You don't have to be an “accelerationist” or a “doomer" to see that this time is different... more »
House of Albert Barnes. What drove the curmudgeonly collector to acquire so many Renoirs, Cézannes and Modiglianis?... more »
Through binges, bankruptcies, and depressive spells, Edgar Allan Poe knew where the best of him lay: in making art... more »
In the 18th century, hypochondria was a rarefied disease tied to leisure and luxury. Then the laboring classes began to develop it... more »
Dante’s divine… autofiction? The Commedia is not a “memoir” in the conventional sense, yet it’s a deeply personal reflection... more »
Van Gogh, age 32, arrived in Paris a "provincial rube" and “painter of no particular skill." Did the city really transform him?... more »
“The only people who connect ancient and modern Greece are tour guides, Fulbright scholars, and fascists”... more »
When it comes to sexual matters, the Bible is neither clear nor consistent. Diarmaid MacCulloch teases out the contradictions... more »
Many academics tolerate the metaphysical commitments of mainstream religionists. But a belief in the paranormal?... more »
Free speech and its discontents. “We cannot have truth and wisdom without accommodating error and folly”... more »
Here come the pedagogy gurus, with their gaseous abstractions and bureaucratic proceduralism... more »
Experiencing an obscure, hyper-specific emotion? In some language, there’s probably a word for that... more »
What is "woke"? An abundance of zeal, a lack of proportion, and self-interest masquerading as general interest... more »
Stanley Fish goes to the movies. At 86, the "totalitarian Tinkerbell" is still at it, yoking legal theory to Hollywood production... more »
The debate over privacy has bogged down in stalemate between user agreements and opt-out buttons. We've lost sight of what privacy is for... more »
Social psychology is a field in crisis. What’s the main problem: bad methods or bad ideas?... more »
A faithful pet, some liquor, books stacked just so — since Montaigne’s time the private library has been a place of quiet joy... more »
As three recent books show, “arguing about criticism is far less pleasurable than arguing about books”... more »
The medieval mob. Crowds broke political regimes just as quickly as they made them... more »
What makes a “monster”? Human boundaries are always shifting, redefining what constitutes monstrous abnormality ... more »
In every age, diet advice reflects the perennial and the faddish, the sensible and the ludicrous. The ancients were no exception... more »
Épater la bourgeoisie. Artists once sought to disturb the conventions and the complacency of polite society, but no more... more »
In 1945, Olivier Messiaen split the Parisian music scene: Was his work modernist genius? Or hopelessly lost in idolatry and kitsch?... more »
R.E.M. had a sound that was "sonically sui generis and abnormally normal" and a knack for cashing in without being seen as selling out... more »
The misadventures of Augustus the Strong include an epic drinking bout with Peter the Great and an obsession with the crown of Poland... more »
The paradox of Marx’s popularity: His genius is widely acknowledged precisely as the political horizon of Marxism has diminished... more »
Simone Weil adored her parents and refused to let them into her inner life, especially once Christianity began to engross her... more »
We have little to fear from machine-generated art, argues David Hajdu, citing the player piano. But generative AI is not like the player piano... more »
As a critic, W G Sebald produced something rare in German: criticism that functions between academic study and journalistic discussion... more »
Bibliophobia presents occasionally as a literal fear of books. More often it’s an anxiety about reading for those with deep connections to literature... more »
When Isaac Newton broke white light into colored rays, he did not find pink. But it was evident in nature, and rapidly became fashionable... more »
A prodigy of Renaissance Italy, Pico della Mirandola devised his grand unified theory of mystical learning at the age of 23... more »
For Flaubert, Balzac “was no writer, merely a man of ideas and of observation; he saw everything, but he didn’t know how to express anything”... more »
The evolution of Jonathan Haidt: He used to be open-minded and humble; now he’s polemical and grumpy ... more »
Cellphones, social media, AI. “The more we communicate, the worse things seem to get,” says Nicholas Carr... more »
What’s the result of endless music, organized into playlists seamlessly optimized just for you? Aural wallpaper... more »
We seek rest, yet are wary of its implicit boredom. This dilemma is resolved, perhaps, only by cats... more »
The homogenous, aging American psychoanalytic community has begun emphasizing social injustice. The result: chaos... more »
Hunter-gatherer societies were much more violent than our own, but much of that is due to a relatively small number of prehistoric psychopaths... more »
One early human tool gave rise to our leap in intelligence: not the sharpened stone, but the handbag, for carrying food and babies... more »
For a powerful account of the human condition, writes Marilynne Robinson, turn not to “anemic anthropology,” but to Calvinism... more »
Fairy tales are archetypal stories that seem to come from nowhere and to belong to everyone. This is an illusion... more »
Today we treat novels as salubrious stress relievers — kale smoothies for the soul. That overlooks their dark, diabolical potency... more »
The necessity of Martha Nussbaum. Her philosophy is never divorced from the messy, complex, and sometimes painful stuff of real life... more »
Alice Gribbin: “Those who deem the nude in art a ‘sex object’ betray themselves as prudish and crass”... more »
What can the memoir of madness accomplish? It can force us to reckon with ugly things, not because they are titillating, but because they are true... more »
“The alternative to a recovery of the liberal imagination … may be neither illiberalism nor the neoliberal status quo but a new barbarism”... more »
Technology has long been a boon to creativity, especially in film. But AI and its machine-managed flawlessness are different... more »
What is intuition? The return of a lost memory? An unearned sense of certitude? A physician deals with losing his decisiveness... more »
A victim of his own accessibility. Montaigne’s writing is categorized as “motivational self-help.” Don’t be fooled... more »
Dave Eggers’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius was a “big, huge mistake,” but one we should be grateful for... more »
Social science has a rigor problem, and the common solutions — replication, public critique — are inefficient. It’s time for a new approach... more »
When Fukuyama’s “The End of History?” came out over 35 years ago, it was roundly mocked. But he’s been proven right... more »
Perry Anderson asks: Why is neoliberalism more powerful and pervasive an ideology than the liberalism on which it rests?... more »
A plague of bad essays purports to explain how some distant historical event explains the present. Beware such relevance mongering... more »
The supremacy of finitude: Our lives, our species, and our universe will all someday come to an end. That should galvanize us... more »
If the universe offers us clues to its purpose, the reasonable thing to do is not just pay attention but believe. Ross Douthat’s case for religion... more »
When Shulamith Firestone finally published her second book, it wasn't a memoir of her descent into psychosis. It was something deeper ... more »
AI and the problem of other minds. How can we ever know if AI has subjective feelings? Richard Dawkins asked ChatGPT... more »
AI and literature. "Writing it off, ignoring it, assuming it is a slop machine and little more...is a narrow, badly informed, and false view of what is going on"... more »
Dostoevsky's faith. Belief, doubt, and hypocrisy preoccupy both his fictional characters and his own agonized quest for understanding... more »
A new literary genre — call it the Hot Divorcées Club — has arrived with an unmistakable whiff of emancipation... more »
“Make your own job.” The slogan of the 19th-century New Thought movement has been embraced by contemporary self-help gurus... more »
Fredric Jameson left us with a slogan (“Always historicize!”), a weighty best seller on postmodernism, and an aversion to sentimentality... more »
"The use of a review is not to force talent, but to create a favorable atmosphere,” said T.S. Eliot. the transatlantic review cultivated just such an atmosphere... more »
University presses are flourishing as they move beyond monographs to put out big, bold, and often award-winning books... more »
Sam Kriss goes in search of "alt lit" and finds that its hyper-sincere, hyper-vulnerable, hyper-personal writing is indistinguishable from the literary mainstream... more »
A century's accumulation of cliché leads us to associate The Great Gatsby with gin, jazz, and the Roaring Twenties. That misses its point... more »
Capitalism may be the best economic system, but the price for all that prosperity was always going to be at the cost of high culture... more »
What differentiates translation from the other literary arts? The way translators read. Damion Searls explains... more »
Socrates was poor, ugly, boastful, kind of a jerk. He was also, of course, a timeless genius. But is he a man for our times?... more »
Paul Krugman has a question for the New York Times. Given its “push toward blandness,” “why even bother having an opinion section?”... more »
Agnes Callard: "Where once children were instructed to be saintly, or at least virtuous, or at least ordinary, now they are invited to be weird"... more »
In bohemian New York, a vibe shift is underway. The avant-garde is advancing no more than a series of poses and affectations... more »
Writers like Kafka and Edgar Allan Poe conveyed moral, practical, and proverbial wisdom. But now “the communicability of experience is decreasing”... more »
We no longer read long books but seem to have no problem with long movies or narrative TV. The “attention crisis” isn’t what you think it is... more »
“In the age of abundant digital information, materials libraries offer something scarce: hands-on experience with the stuff that makes the world”... more »
Questions of taste are freighted by uncertainty and ambiguity. In the arts, what distinguishes good from bad?... more »
“It seems that it’s a philosopher’s job to say every word three times, its opposite twice and then the original word again, italicised”... more »
James Longenbach’s poetry occurred in “the lyric now” — a “state of constant mutability … always happening, always having happened”... more »
A cenotaph for Newton would be taller than the Pyramids. Paris was to have 17 extravagant tollhouses. 18th-century architecture had a flair for the dramatic... more »
“A tissue of horrors” telling of “an intoxicating spree of universal atrocity” — 19th-century France reviled (and was hooked on) newspapers... more »
No matter how rigorously philosophical Hannah Arendt’s prose is, it makes space for something like mysticism... more »
Fifty years of luminous painting in Sienna — largely of saints and martyrs — ended abruptly, with the plague... more »
“The widespread caricature of Adorno as a scowling contrarian or snob continues to inhibit our understanding of his work”... more »
“Tradwives” boast hobby farms and $300,000 old-timey ovens to go with their polka-dotted aesthetics. Paging Thorstein Veblen... more »
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