There are more dialects of American English than you might expect, including seven in New Orleans alone... more »
Lavinia Greenlaw’s essays are curatorial and taxonomic. How much of the world do we know merely by seeing it?... more »
What is it like to be an animal? The question has driven philosophical treatises — as well as the donning of a $23,000 human-sized wolf suit... more »
Language, meaning, and perception. An old debate over linguistic relativity has new implications ... more »
Keats was in a bind. He was penniless, homeless, and tubercular. No one would accompany him to the warm climate he needed... more »
The Algorithm: Not since the discovery of the libido or the printing press has something loomed so large... more »
Ever wondered why every coffee shop looks the same? They are beholden to sad, algorithmically-driven design trends... more »
All hail Guy Davenport, who praised androgyny in the National Review and translated the Greeks as he munched fried bologna... more »
With major elections looming, a moral panic has swept the globe: social media empowers populism. Is there anything to that?... more »
Mansa Musa, a 14th-century West African monarch, possessed nearly half the gold known to exist in the Eastern Hemisphere... more »
To the extent that fatness is unfairly conflated with sickness, can a philosopher cure fatphobia? Kate Manne is trying ... more »
What’s most difficult about Proust’s In Search of Lost Time is finding the time to read it. Ryan Ruby explains... more »
A bruiser until the very end, Milton Friedman knew the value of adopting the role of the underdog... more »
"Some books are so utterly bad that the case against them can be made based on almost any excerpt.” Walter Isaacson’s Elon Musk is one of those books... more »
The evolution of celebrity analysis: Madonna-ology was based on critical theory, Taylor Swift studies is concerned with teaching skills... more »
The most surprising thing about a writing group at the CIA? No one is working on a spy novel... more »
Free will is an illusion, argues much of 21st-century science. The neuroscientist Kevin Mitchell begs to differ... more »
Flaubert’s solitude. In 1851, he asked rhetorically: “Am I really to have a goal other than Art itself?”... more »
The classical-music establishment’s challenge: How to foster the passionate devotion that allows an art form to survive... more »
The conglomeration of publishing explains some of our literary culture. But does it really explain all of it?... more »
Once you enter Guy Davenport’s labyrinth of learning and imagination, you never get out. John Jeremiah Sullivan explains... more »
Our punctuation, ourselves. What are we really talking about when we talk about exclamation points? ... more »
Virginia Woolf likened her to a “giant cucumber” with “the freakishness of an elf” — but does Margaret Cavendish deserve a closer look?... more »
“No one can really believe in an apology until after it happens,” says Agnes Callard. “That’s the telltale mark of a miracle”... more »
The first influencer, Beau Brummell, exuded “calculated nonchalance.” He was a harbinger of our celebrity culture... more »
Katherine Mansfield flirted with the Bloomsbury set at their parties — then plotted how to crush them... more »
“Critique is not against reason; it is the very practice of reason.” Peter Gordon lays to rest some misconceptions of critical theory... more »
Academic dishonesty, improper attribution, citational errors — why are professors so wary of invoking “plagiarism” in the case of Claudine Gay?... more »
“Although the concept of equality may seem intuitive, it is surprisingly difficult to pin down with any precision”... more »
Tom Wolfe was less an inventive journalist or mediocre novelist − though he was both – than a grand theorist of American life... more »
Does the afterlife exist? Yes, thought Kurt Gödel. Where else could humans fulfill their potential?... more »
Can a poet with no experience of combat or trenches capture the reality of a frontline soldier in WWI?... more »
Planning to give up alcohol, smoking, or chocolate? Behind such self-sacrifice lies the despair of just wanting to give up... more »
The medical-mystery genre has a familiar arc, usually punctuated by a revelatory “aha” moment. Not for Tom Scocca... more »
Ostriches beheaded, horses made into consuls. Embellishing the scandalous tales of Roman Emperors doesn’t make them useless... more »
Samuel Moyn laments liberalism’s lack of an aspiration to perfection. But that never was a liberal tenet, and shouldn’t be... more »
The first book of photography? British Algae, a binding of hundreds of cyanotypes compiled by an amateur botanist... more »
Jill Lepore: “The internet is an astonishing product of human ingenuity and an incredible archive. But … it has not realized the promise of democratization”... more »
Amid calls to “decolonize” everything from hipsters to universities, one wonders: Where did this jargonized swagger originate?... more »
Confessions of a bookseller. The essential problem with how we talk about the job – and it is a job – is preciosity... more »
The way to get ahead in economics, Robert Solow quipped, is to provide a “brilliant argument in favor of an absurd conclusion.” Has anything changed?... more »
“The abandonment of ornament has levied a heavy toll on the practice of architecture, tantamount to misplacing a crucial instrument of one’s toolbox”... more »
The next frontier in live musical performance? Zero gravity. What would it sound like to break the music-making conventions of earth?... more »
Wokeness, anti-wokeness, and the enduring allure of victim status. Geoff Shullenberger on why identity politics isn’t going anywhere... more »
We never tire of trying to live better lives. For better results, consult better thinkers. Start with John Stuart Mill... more »
David Brooks on the golden age of nonfiction and his selections for this year’s Sidney Awards... more »
Christian Wiman’s religious vision. God is more than us, more than we can ever know, and in that unknowing we find freedom... more »
The chief risk facing elite higher education isn’t financial, but that its authority will grow brittle and its appeal sectarian... more »
Nostalgia can be spun out of the flimsiest of cultural phenomena. Exhibit A: The “new” “last” Beatles’ single... more »
Allen Ginsberg seems to have kept everything, even letters to the American Nazi Party. “I heard you want to kill me, can we meet and discuss it?!?”... more »
We are witnessing a highly fractious workplace dispute at the heart of the American culture industry. Andrea Long Chu explains... more »
A writer is a creature of solitude, we’re told. Hogwash! Writing is the most gregarious of the arts... more »
America’s founding philosopher? John Locke is central to the nation’s political thought, however historically dubious his place is... more »
The two Chomskys. How did the political activist reconcile a lifetime spent in close proximity to the US military?... more »
Ideas of the afterlife. In the Western tradition, eternal fate is connected to one's earthly actions. Not so for the ancient Egyptians... more »
The Russian Revolution changed the lives of a third of humanity for better or for worse. Robert Service is its indefatigable chronicler... more »
Pissarro’s Jewishness has typically been treated by biographers as a minor matter. That is a mistake... more »
“Why, in the last 10 years, have elite colleges in particular become sites of such relentless ideological confrontation?”... more »
Sly Stone and the ever expanding influence – funk, fusion, new wave, pop – of one of the world’s most notoriously unproductive people... more »
What turns serious people into comedic figures? For some, it’s the rigidity of their thinking. Consider Christopher Hitchens... more »
Was Milton Friedman the “last conservative,” or a founding radical of the contemporary age?... more »
During the Renaissance, beauty secrets were democratized, and women strove to become works of art... more »
A year into ChatGPT, what’s the verdict? AI is simultaneously impressive and pretty dumb... more »
There are more dialects of American English than you might expect, including seven in New Orleans alone... more »
Language, meaning, and perception. An old debate over linguistic relativity has new implications ... more »
Ever wondered why every coffee shop looks the same? They are beholden to sad, algorithmically-driven design trends... more »
Mansa Musa, a 14th-century West African monarch, possessed nearly half the gold known to exist in the Eastern Hemisphere... more »
A bruiser until the very end, Milton Friedman knew the value of adopting the role of the underdog... more »
The most surprising thing about a writing group at the CIA? No one is working on a spy novel... more »
The classical-music establishment’s challenge: How to foster the passionate devotion that allows an art form to survive... more »
Our punctuation, ourselves. What are we really talking about when we talk about exclamation points? ... more »
The first influencer, Beau Brummell, exuded “calculated nonchalance.” He was a harbinger of our celebrity culture... more »
Academic dishonesty, improper attribution, citational errors — why are professors so wary of invoking “plagiarism” in the case of Claudine Gay?... more »
Does the afterlife exist? Yes, thought Kurt Gödel. Where else could humans fulfill their potential?... more »
The medical-mystery genre has a familiar arc, usually punctuated by a revelatory “aha” moment. Not for Tom Scocca... more »
The first book of photography? British Algae, a binding of hundreds of cyanotypes compiled by an amateur botanist... more »
Confessions of a bookseller. The essential problem with how we talk about the job – and it is a job – is preciosity... more »
The next frontier in live musical performance? Zero gravity. What would it sound like to break the music-making conventions of earth?... more »
David Brooks on the golden age of nonfiction and his selections for this year’s Sidney Awards... more »
Nostalgia can be spun out of the flimsiest of cultural phenomena. Exhibit A: The “new” “last” Beatles’ single... more »
A writer is a creature of solitude, we’re told. Hogwash! Writing is the most gregarious of the arts... more »
Ideas of the afterlife. In the Western tradition, eternal fate is connected to one's earthly actions. Not so for the ancient Egyptians... more »
“Why, in the last 10 years, have elite colleges in particular become sites of such relentless ideological confrontation?”... more »
Was Milton Friedman the “last conservative,” or a founding radical of the contemporary age?... more »
It’s easy to moralize about capitalism, and especially about the thrill of consumerism. For that, read Zola... more »
How did Harvard Medical School become ensnared in the underground market in human body parts?... more »
What distinguishes war from genocide? It’s an especially fraught question these days, one that Omer Bartov takes head-on... more »
A scholar who publishes a paper every five days? The rise of the extremely productive researcher... more »
The New York Times has long been accused of having a liberal bias. The real problem, says James Bennet, is its illiberalism... more »
Melrose Place was a typically anodyne mid-'90s primetime soap opera. How did it get mixed up with a radical artists collective?... more »
Want to see genre bending book-cover design? Don’t look in a bookstore. Look at designs that got killed... more »
In the Victorian era, friendship was crucial. And no one was more essential to Charles Dickens than Wilkie Collins... more »
All culture was microculture, until it was eclipsed by monoculture. Now microculture is on the rise again... more »
The heart of the task for any poet, according to Czeslaw Milosz, is bearing what is borne by others... more »
Betty Friedan, the “iron mask of machismo,” the feminine mystique, and how far we have – and have not – come... more »
In June 1968, a who’s who of poets convened on Long Island. They ate lobster, drank vodka, and brawled... more »
John Gray: “If you think in what are called secular terms, you can’t really understand the world that we now live in”... more »
Karl Ove Knausgård, Dag Solstad, Jon Fosse — Norway has become a literary superpower... more »
Beware the sensitivity read. For some publishers words like “foreign,” “God,” “nerd,” and “freshman” are off limits... more »
In Central European spa towns rich in literary history, you can bathe in everything from beer to radon... more »
Moby-Dick had been out of print for decades when the author died. Since then, we’ve rediscovered the Melville we need... more »
Spare a thought for cliché-verre. Part printmaking, part photography, this 19th-century artistic medium never caught on... more »
Reassessing the work of Georg Lukács means expurgating Bolshevik themes and some long-outdated Marxist concepts. That’s asking a lot... more »
Lavinia Greenlaw’s essays are curatorial and taxonomic. How much of the world do we know merely by seeing it?... more »
Keats was in a bind. He was penniless, homeless, and tubercular. No one would accompany him to the warm climate he needed... more »
All hail Guy Davenport, who praised androgyny in the National Review and translated the Greeks as he munched fried bologna... more »
To the extent that fatness is unfairly conflated with sickness, can a philosopher cure fatphobia? Kate Manne is trying ... more »
"Some books are so utterly bad that the case against them can be made based on almost any excerpt.” Walter Isaacson’s Elon Musk is one of those books... more »
Free will is an illusion, argues much of 21st-century science. The neuroscientist Kevin Mitchell begs to differ... more »
The conglomeration of publishing explains some of our literary culture. But does it really explain all of it?... more »
Virginia Woolf likened her to a “giant cucumber” with “the freakishness of an elf” — but does Margaret Cavendish deserve a closer look?... more »
Katherine Mansfield flirted with the Bloomsbury set at their parties — then plotted how to crush them... more »
“Although the concept of equality may seem intuitive, it is surprisingly difficult to pin down with any precision”... more »
Can a poet with no experience of combat or trenches capture the reality of a frontline soldier in WWI?... more »
Ostriches beheaded, horses made into consuls. Embellishing the scandalous tales of Roman Emperors doesn’t make them useless... more »
Jill Lepore: “The internet is an astonishing product of human ingenuity and an incredible archive. But … it has not realized the promise of democratization”... more »
The way to get ahead in economics, Robert Solow quipped, is to provide a “brilliant argument in favor of an absurd conclusion.” Has anything changed?... more »
Wokeness, anti-wokeness, and the enduring allure of victim status. Geoff Shullenberger on why identity politics isn’t going anywhere... more »
Christian Wiman’s religious vision. God is more than us, more than we can ever know, and in that unknowing we find freedom... more »
Allen Ginsberg seems to have kept everything, even letters to the American Nazi Party. “I heard you want to kill me, can we meet and discuss it?!?”... more »
America’s founding philosopher? John Locke is central to the nation’s political thought, however historically dubious his place is... more »
The Russian Revolution changed the lives of a third of humanity for better or for worse. Robert Service is its indefatigable chronicler... more »
Sly Stone and the ever expanding influence – funk, fusion, new wave, pop – of one of the world’s most notoriously unproductive people... more »
During the Renaissance, beauty secrets were democratized, and women strove to become works of art... more »
Despair is painful, miserable, to be avoided. But as Kirkegaard understood, it is also essential... more »
Can you determine if a Warhol is an authentic Warhol? Depends on whom you ask... more »
Goo, gunk, gloop, slime. Whatever you call it, it is as fundamental to living beings as oxygen and sunlight... more »
Pessimistic fatalist that he is, John Gray sees new Leviathans, dangerous Leviathans on the march... more »
Willa Cather, who loathed biographers and critics, placed every trap, pitfall, and barrier in their path... more »
Notebooks by any name – rapiaria, zibaldoni, memoriali, giornali – represent a history of thinking on paper... more »
Falsehoods proliferate online because the history of human culture is a history of fake things... more »
The history of Marxism is written as either triumph or tragedy. Both approaches prevent an honest reckoning... more »
James Whistler wasn’t one to turn the other cheek. When John Ruskin panned his painting, Whistler sued... more »
The topic of how one’s life connects to one’s aesthetic judgments is a fraught one. Consider Sasha Frere-Jones... more »
“We can understand a culture by what it calls monstrous; the monster stands for everything a society attempts to cast out”... more »
Why did Janet Malcolm, late in life, confess to a prolonged extramarital affair with her New Yorker editor, decades after the fact?... more »
“As the centuries passed, what men of erudition had once considered ‘magic’ increasingly began to look like ‘technology’”... more »
Derek Parfit believed we should live more impersonally. By ignoring his friends and family, he lived up — or, rather, down — to this principle... more »
In 1966, Philip Rieff labeled and lambasted “therapeutic culture.” It is ever more apparent he was on to something... more »
How four women – Arendt, de Beauvoir, Rand, Weil – concluded that philosophy had to be utterly reimagined... more »
Schoenberg, stigmatization. The argument that classical music took a wrong turn in the middle of the 20th century is downright wrong... more »
The chapter. It dates to 13th-century narrative units in the Gospels, before the separation of sentences and even of words... more »
What is it like to be an animal? The question has driven philosophical treatises — as well as the donning of a $23,000 human-sized wolf suit... more »
The Algorithm: Not since the discovery of the libido or the printing press has something loomed so large... more »
With major elections looming, a moral panic has swept the globe: social media empowers populism. Is there anything to that?... more »
What’s most difficult about Proust’s In Search of Lost Time is finding the time to read it. Ryan Ruby explains... more »
The evolution of celebrity analysis: Madonna-ology was based on critical theory, Taylor Swift studies is concerned with teaching skills... more »
Flaubert’s solitude. In 1851, he asked rhetorically: “Am I really to have a goal other than Art itself?”... more »
Once you enter Guy Davenport’s labyrinth of learning and imagination, you never get out. John Jeremiah Sullivan explains... more »
“No one can really believe in an apology until after it happens,” says Agnes Callard. “That’s the telltale mark of a miracle”... more »
“Critique is not against reason; it is the very practice of reason.” Peter Gordon lays to rest some misconceptions of critical theory... more »
Tom Wolfe was less an inventive journalist or mediocre novelist − though he was both – than a grand theorist of American life... more »
Planning to give up alcohol, smoking, or chocolate? Behind such self-sacrifice lies the despair of just wanting to give up... more »
Samuel Moyn laments liberalism’s lack of an aspiration to perfection. But that never was a liberal tenet, and shouldn’t be... more »
Amid calls to “decolonize” everything from hipsters to universities, one wonders: Where did this jargonized swagger originate?... more »
“The abandonment of ornament has levied a heavy toll on the practice of architecture, tantamount to misplacing a crucial instrument of one’s toolbox”... more »
We never tire of trying to live better lives. For better results, consult better thinkers. Start with John Stuart Mill... more »
The chief risk facing elite higher education isn’t financial, but that its authority will grow brittle and its appeal sectarian... more »
We are witnessing a highly fractious workplace dispute at the heart of the American culture industry. Andrea Long Chu explains... more »
The two Chomskys. How did the political activist reconcile a lifetime spent in close proximity to the US military?... more »
Pissarro’s Jewishness has typically been treated by biographers as a minor matter. That is a mistake... more »
What turns serious people into comedic figures? For some, it’s the rigidity of their thinking. Consider Christopher Hitchens... more »
A year into ChatGPT, what’s the verdict? AI is simultaneously impressive and pretty dumb... more »
When Mala Chatterjee was most broken and vulnerable, only one thing could soothe and sustain her: Infinite Jest... more »
Tyler Austin Harper: “Humanists today need to reckon with the fact that the only thing our politicking is accomplishing is hastening our own demise”... more »
As a child, Kathryn Schulz heard rumors that she was related to the Polish novelist Bruno Schulz. Is it true?... more »
An open society is based upon the malleability of opinion. So what happens when persuasion is no longer possible?... more »
When a library's entire digital footprint is stolen by a ransomware gang, what remains? The British Library is finding out... more »
Moral clarity is rarely clear, and simplistic certitudes have no place at institutions of higher learning... more »
A great poet, such as Robert Frost, affords misreadings, "perhaps even welcomes them, and is misread anew by each successive generation”... more »
Philosophy and pseudonymity. Why do so many philosophers write under so many names? Consider Kierkegaard... more »
Humans have always wanted to become like Gods. Francis Bacon understood this desire better than most... more »
Flaubert was once described as a “martyr of literary style.” His letters reveal just how apt that assessment was... more »
The art world is full of grifters, fakers, thieves, and critics on the make. Monet knew instinctively how to play the game... more »
Critics' lives are deskbound, confined to their thoughts and other people’s art. What drives them to it?... more »
“Ideology,” a word coined during the French Revolution, was declared dead by Daniel Bell in 1960. Now ideologies are roaring back to life... more »
Objective measures are our most effective weapon against racism and sexism, says Steven Pinker: blind auditions, traffic cameras, SAT... more »
Are there objectively correct answers to the big philosophical questions? A meta-ethicist makes the case that there are... more »
“You’re not allowed to be whiter than him ... And you cannot wear a hat because that is his thing.” Patricia Lockwood meets the pope... more »
Susan Sontag and George Steiner could be extraordinarily ill-mannered. But their critical ardor remains infectious... more »
A best-selling philosophical text on Amazon is the decade-old dissertation of a writer best known as Bronze Age Pervert... more »
Rescuing Pushkin from commemoration and co-optation: He “deserves to be stripped of his official veneration to reveal the irreverent poet underneath”... more »
Censorship is a widespread problem among scientists. It’s most often driven by the scientists themselves... more »
Do animals need complex brains to experience consciousness? New work on scallops, jellyfish, and crabs suggests not... more »
When Gawker went girly and created a home for radical self-disclosure and all-abiding contempt. Moe Tkacik looks back... more »
My queue, myself. Ordering DVDs from Netflix served as a kind of biography of the various phases of my life... more »
Whether the conglomeration of the publishing industry has been good or bad is beside the point. Artists adapt... more »
George Packer: “In taking political action, writers and artists are likelier to betray than fulfill the demands of their vocation”... more »
The cultural position of aliens has changed radically. We can expect to hear a lot more about them in coming years... more »
No Christian saint described levitation in as much detail — or complained about it with as much vigor — as Saint Teresa of Avila... more »
Russell Kirk and the gothic cast of the conservative mind. What do his ghost stories reveal about his political outlook?... more »
The varieties of loneliness: We can feel isolated from strangers, from loved ones, even from ourselves... more »
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