How does the esteemed literary scholar Mark McGurl go from Henry James to Space Raptor Butt Invasion?... more »
W.G. Sebald was canonized quickly in the Anglophone literary world, but something seems off in his rapid ascent... more »
The man who built “an ark to save learning from the deluge,” Sir Thomas Bodley reimagined what a library could be... more »
He wasn't the most gifted trumpeter or the most impressive vocalist. But Chet Baker was the epitome of West Coast cool... more »
“Saying that racism is the fundamental fact of U.S. history will not supply a political strategy for the present”... more »
When Ta-Nehisi Coates wanted to escape the expectation that his work provide hope, he found a model in Tony Judt... more »
We know the poet Phillis Wheatley for her suffering and resistance to enslavement. But don’t overlook her humor ... more »
Hunter S. Thompson was many things, not least a drug-addled gun enthusiast and a fabulist. He was also a colossal jerk ... more »
What differentiates humans from other animals? Our capacity and need for illusion ... more »
In an age of ambient unwellness, how should we think about the chronically ill? ... more »
To E.O. Wilson, James Watson is “the Caligula of biology.” To Watson, Wilson is a mere stamp collector... more »
Ever since Hammurabi’s Code, most societies have restricted a woman’s freedom to enjoy alcohol. Nevertheless, they persisted ... more »
The humanities have a chronic morale problem. Is that because the field’s tenured professors are trapped in jobs they no longer want? ... more »
"Postmodernism may be a historical fact, but it finds history itself a bore," says Terry Eagleton. "The past is simply a collection of styles to be recycled” ... more »
“I shun father and mother and wife and brother when my genius calls me,” boasted Emerson, who was extremely dependent on his family ... more »
David Graeber, disheveled and politically radical, was always ill-suited to the academy ... more »
Everyone perceives color slightly differently — “a dance between subjects and objects, mind and matter” ... more »
Is the purpose of studying U.S. history to create a consensus view, or to provoke argument?... more »
Do you blame Plato for philosophy’s obsession with metaphysical abstraction? Not so fast ... more »
“Obviously, all biographies are false," said Czeslaw Milosz. What would the exiled poet make of a new account of his life in California?... more »
Something is rotten in the groves of academe. Political intolerance, exorbitant costs, weak leaders. Time to start over, says Niall Ferguson ... more »
Wittgenstein wrote like a "poet trapped inside a philosopher.” Philosophy can describe the world, but only fiction can create it... more »
For all D.H. Lawrence’s hateful misogyny, racism, and plain bad temper, there is something in his work that stays urgent and alive ... more »
The influences of slavery are pervasive. And that makes it difficult to precisely identify its discrete consequences ... more »
"There are so many self-delusions that are involved in being an artist," says David Salle, "most of which are necessary" ... more »
Elizabeth Hardwick deplored biography as merely a “scrupulous accounting of time.” Does her own biography transcend that? ... more »
Hannah Arendt’s life was marked by three escapes: from a Gestapo cell in Berlin, from an internment camp in France, and from Heidegger... more »
Female protagonists in great books are usually great beauties. What about the plain-looking female protagonist?... more »
Moll Cutpurse, who ran a criminal empire in 1600s London, was an early "queen of the underworld" ... more »
“You stir some very deep part of my soul,” Iris Murdoch told Philippa Foot. Not lovers or merely close friends, what were they? ... more »
Torture devices, evil eyes, tufts of hair: Edgar Allan Poe created a lasting aesthetic of disgust... more »
Ethical statements have no objective truth and are thus subjective. So went the prevailing Oxford moral philosophy of the 1930s and '40s... more »
John Ashbery was a poet of experiment and verbal adventure, of charity and self-forgiveness, and also of “mandarin avoidance"... more »
Most of us have an inner voice that sounds like us. But what if your inner voice is a bickering Italian couple? ... more »
One by one, major philosophers, physicists, and neuroscientists take on the hard problem of consciousness — and fail. Antonio Damasio is the latest ... more »
Beware the “expert” who has suddenly reached some enlightened, politically convenient truth... more »
At tens of thousands of pages, Claude Fredericks's diary is engrossing, tedious, and quite possibly a masterpiece ... more »
René Magritte was a practical joker and occasional miscreant. He was also, perhaps, a little mad ... more »
Rosalind Franklin was deprived of double-helix fame. Was that due to a conspiracy, or plain old sexism?... more »
H.G. Wells called himself a “Don Juan among the intelligentsia.” His affairs led to children, bad feelings, and several novels... more »
Greasepaint, face powder, new clothes, cold cream: Noël Coward noted every grubby particular of life in the theater... more »
The idea of exorcism is, in many ways, ridiculous. Yet it lingers, as if nasty spirits were everywhere.... more »
Two of the most influential American men of the past 100 years have surprising parallels in their biographies: W.E.B. Du Bois and Barack Obama... more »
The flight from meritocracy. Yes, it entrenches elites and inequality. But the alternatives are worse... more »
Steven Pinker’s forays into the humanities are like someone with muddy boots entering your house and arrogantly sticking his feet on your table ... more »
In 18th-century England, belief in ghosts splintered along political lines: Tories believed in the supernatural; Whigs doubted ... more »
Like that of social justice, the language of victimhood is endlessly co-opted. For some, complaint is a sacrifice — for others, it’s a shield... more »
Literary study badly needs a new infusion of adrenaline, writes Marjorie Perloff. And so she turns to the work of Yuri Tynianov... more »
Social media has blurred the distinction between personal and public speech. Nicholas Carr has a way to fix the mess ... more »
Far from the “the decade that taste forgot,” the Eighties was an era of big hair, bombastic riffs, and deep cultural significance ... more »
Dense, abstract, suspect: Hegel has long been out of favor among Anglophone philosophers. Why all the interest now? ... more »
Are Céline’s long-lost manuscripts “the greatest literary discovery ever” — or an anti-Semitic bomb waiting to go off?... more »
Sea levels rise, oceans warm, and CO2 builds up in the atmosphere — a physicist takes on our harrowing climate future... more »
The methods of connection between author and reader are increasingly owned by Amazon. But ownership does not constitute possession ... more »
Poor lighting, blurry faces, awkward poses, unflattering angles: in praise of bad photos... more »
The tyranny of metrics has overtaken journalism, conflating consumer choice with democratic needs... more »
Milosz in Berkeley. The Polish-Lithuanian poet's seriousness was at odds with the divine madness of the times... more »
The deep past is a vast canvas for working out our political self-consciousness and collective fantasies... more »
Racial, ethnic, and religious animosities have distinct origins. But are they fueled by the same psychic or social forces? ... more »
Carl Schmitt's ideas have fresh appeal in a time of authoritarian populism, and nowhere more so than in China ... more »
Foucault and Lasch are rarely read as kindred thinkers. Yet they help to explain how we became so fixated on identity... more »
Dostoyevsky's St. Petersburg flowed with nihilism, egoism, materialism. All of it went into Crime and Punishment... more »
Futurists are drawn to the sensational and the unlikely: brain uploading, magnetic floating cars. But the actual future will be more like today’s world ... more »
How does the esteemed literary scholar Mark McGurl go from Henry James to Space Raptor Butt Invasion?... more »
He wasn't the most gifted trumpeter or the most impressive vocalist. But Chet Baker was the epitome of West Coast cool... more »
We know the poet Phillis Wheatley for her suffering and resistance to enslavement. But don’t overlook her humor ... more »
In an age of ambient unwellness, how should we think about the chronically ill? ... more »
The humanities have a chronic morale problem. Is that because the field’s tenured professors are trapped in jobs they no longer want? ... more »
David Graeber, disheveled and politically radical, was always ill-suited to the academy ... more »
Do you blame Plato for philosophy’s obsession with metaphysical abstraction? Not so fast ... more »
Wittgenstein wrote like a "poet trapped inside a philosopher.” Philosophy can describe the world, but only fiction can create it... more »
"There are so many self-delusions that are involved in being an artist," says David Salle, "most of which are necessary" ... more »
Female protagonists in great books are usually great beauties. What about the plain-looking female protagonist?... more »
Torture devices, evil eyes, tufts of hair: Edgar Allan Poe created a lasting aesthetic of disgust... more »
Most of us have an inner voice that sounds like us. But what if your inner voice is a bickering Italian couple? ... more »
At tens of thousands of pages, Claude Fredericks's diary is engrossing, tedious, and quite possibly a masterpiece ... more »
H.G. Wells called himself a “Don Juan among the intelligentsia.” His affairs led to children, bad feelings, and several novels... more »
Two of the most influential American men of the past 100 years have surprising parallels in their biographies: W.E.B. Du Bois and Barack Obama... more »
In 18th-century England, belief in ghosts splintered along political lines: Tories believed in the supernatural; Whigs doubted ... more »
Social media has blurred the distinction between personal and public speech. Nicholas Carr has a way to fix the mess ... more »
Are Céline’s long-lost manuscripts “the greatest literary discovery ever” — or an anti-Semitic bomb waiting to go off?... more »
Poor lighting, blurry faces, awkward poses, unflattering angles: in praise of bad photos... more »
The deep past is a vast canvas for working out our political self-consciousness and collective fantasies... more »
Foucault and Lasch are rarely read as kindred thinkers. Yet they help to explain how we became so fixated on identity... more »
Can outspokenness on diversity programs undermine a scholar’s academic standing? The strange case of Dorian S. Abbot... more »
Should the university be a political engine for radical ends? The idea horrified Robert Nisbet, chronicler of academic dogma... more »
Hannah Arendt was Princeton’s first female faculty hire, and later its first female full professor — honors she was profoundly uninterested in... more »
Love songs have the same shape as sex: slow build to an ecstatic top note. But can music give you an orgasm?... more »
Dead musicians are about to show up everywhere, plus other predictions on the next decade in music... more »
The philosopher Myisha Cherry seeks to defend anger — what she calls “Lordean rage” — and to prove Martha Nussbaum wrong... more »
A professor screens the 1965 film version of Othello, featuring Laurence Olivier in blackface, to his class. Is that a racist act?... more »
Before the blackmail, the arrest, and utter ruin, Oscar Wilde was a golden boy, excelling at Oxford and courting society beauties... more »
Literary history abhors a vacuum. Thus Homer, most unknowable of ancient poets, gets a flurry of elaborate and highly discrepant biographies... more »
Abdulrazak Gurnah’s books have sold only 3,000 copies in the United States. How did he go from obscure critic to Nobel laureate? ... more »
Can a heap of sand illuminate the transition from quiet to chaos? That's the premise of the field of sandpile studies... more »
The history of xenophobia has less to do with the ancient Greeks than with the Boxer uprising and a stenographer named Jean Martin de Saintours... more »
You cannot love if you cannot hate. So a much-needed reminder: Don’t neuter criticism with kindness... more »
W.G. Sebald’s fiction is parasitical. It preyed on the Jewish quest for an obliterated past to recover a usable German present... more »
Critics say economics has a math fetish, that it ignores other disciplines, that it is too abstract. But economics’ real problem lies elsewhere... more »
Academics throw around the word “problematic” with a knowing flourish. It’s a given that their colleagues share their politics ... more »
“I know mine exists, my cruelty,” wrote a young Patricia Highsmith. “Though where I cannot precisely say, for I try always to purge myself of evil” ... more »
Email: It gives license to verbiage and turns simple conversations into an exchange of overcrafted essays. It’s time to close our inboxes... more »
The radicalized university. Manifestos grow like mushrooms, but scholarship that isn’t promoting some form of social justice is an odd fit... more »
W.G. Sebald was canonized quickly in the Anglophone literary world, but something seems off in his rapid ascent... more »
“Saying that racism is the fundamental fact of U.S. history will not supply a political strategy for the present”... more »
Hunter S. Thompson was many things, not least a drug-addled gun enthusiast and a fabulist. He was also a colossal jerk ... more »
To E.O. Wilson, James Watson is “the Caligula of biology.” To Watson, Wilson is a mere stamp collector... more »
"Postmodernism may be a historical fact, but it finds history itself a bore," says Terry Eagleton. "The past is simply a collection of styles to be recycled” ... more »
Everyone perceives color slightly differently — “a dance between subjects and objects, mind and matter” ... more »
“Obviously, all biographies are false," said Czeslaw Milosz. What would the exiled poet make of a new account of his life in California?... more »
For all D.H. Lawrence’s hateful misogyny, racism, and plain bad temper, there is something in his work that stays urgent and alive ... more »
Elizabeth Hardwick deplored biography as merely a “scrupulous accounting of time.” Does her own biography transcend that? ... more »
Moll Cutpurse, who ran a criminal empire in 1600s London, was an early "queen of the underworld" ... more »
Ethical statements have no objective truth and are thus subjective. So went the prevailing Oxford moral philosophy of the 1930s and '40s... more »
One by one, major philosophers, physicists, and neuroscientists take on the hard problem of consciousness — and fail. Antonio Damasio is the latest ... more »
René Magritte was a practical joker and occasional miscreant. He was also, perhaps, a little mad ... more »
Greasepaint, face powder, new clothes, cold cream: Noël Coward noted every grubby particular of life in the theater... more »
The flight from meritocracy. Yes, it entrenches elites and inequality. But the alternatives are worse... more »
Like that of social justice, the language of victimhood is endlessly co-opted. For some, complaint is a sacrifice — for others, it’s a shield... more »
Far from the “the decade that taste forgot,” the Eighties was an era of big hair, bombastic riffs, and deep cultural significance ... more »
Sea levels rise, oceans warm, and CO2 builds up in the atmosphere — a physicist takes on our harrowing climate future... more »
The tyranny of metrics has overtaken journalism, conflating consumer choice with democratic needs... more »
Racial, ethnic, and religious animosities have distinct origins. But are they fueled by the same psychic or social forces? ... more »
Dostoyevsky's St. Petersburg flowed with nihilism, egoism, materialism. All of it went into Crime and Punishment... more »
Is Keats’s “Ode on a Grecian Urn” a mournful elegy to artistic devotion or — as a new book argues — a malicious catcall?... more »
“There is a case to be made for self-published Adult Baby Diaper Lover (ABDL) erotica as the quintessential Amazonian genre of literature” ... more »
David Graeber, who died last year, left a final gift: a wildly singular history of the past 30,000 years... more »
What explains the Elizabeth Hardwick revival? Her uncompromising style? Her near-incomprehensible metaphors?... more »
The inescapable Jonathan Franzen is not the novelist America needs, but the one America deserves... more »
Post-liberals agree on little: “They know something has gone wrong, and they suspect the origins of the problem date back several centuries”... more »
The idea of female chastity runs deep in Western culture. "Upon that," said Samuel Johnson, "all property in the world depends"... more »
“Anyone open to the idea of religious belief but uncomfortable with orthodox teachings should read Spinoza” ... more »
The world of scientific publishing is vast, varied, and beset by fraud, bias, negligence, and hype... more »
The art of dark persuasion. What causes sensible people to do things they might not otherwise do?... more »
In the English village of Ockham, around 1287, a boy named William was born. His razor enabled science to blossom... more »
Step aside, internet novel and Instagram novel, there's a new genre ascendant: collective criticism. Is it worthwhile?... more »
Is it possible to write a history of human affairs without any overarching principle? Louis Menand tried... more »
Between 1953 and 1976, private foundations lavished money on orchestras and operas, to the detriment of folk and jazz... more »
A phrase, a rhyme, a play on words: Christopher Ricks has a rare gift for lexical super-sensitivity... more »
“Why do we continue to cling so hard to our work-based identities, in spite of an inner nature that tells us not to work so much?”... more »
Spinoza's philosophy is not antithetical to religion. He was determined to reform religion, not eliminate it ... more »
Why did Jean Sibelius stop composing in his early 50s? Was it alcoholism? Insecurity? The dissipation of his powers?... more »
The man who built “an ark to save learning from the deluge,” Sir Thomas Bodley reimagined what a library could be... more »
When Ta-Nehisi Coates wanted to escape the expectation that his work provide hope, he found a model in Tony Judt... more »
What differentiates humans from other animals? Our capacity and need for illusion ... more »
Ever since Hammurabi’s Code, most societies have restricted a woman’s freedom to enjoy alcohol. Nevertheless, they persisted ... more »
“I shun father and mother and wife and brother when my genius calls me,” boasted Emerson, who was extremely dependent on his family ... more »
Is the purpose of studying U.S. history to create a consensus view, or to provoke argument?... more »
Something is rotten in the groves of academe. Political intolerance, exorbitant costs, weak leaders. Time to start over, says Niall Ferguson ... more »
The influences of slavery are pervasive. And that makes it difficult to precisely identify its discrete consequences ... more »
Hannah Arendt’s life was marked by three escapes: from a Gestapo cell in Berlin, from an internment camp in France, and from Heidegger... more »
“You stir some very deep part of my soul,” Iris Murdoch told Philippa Foot. Not lovers or merely close friends, what were they? ... more »
John Ashbery was a poet of experiment and verbal adventure, of charity and self-forgiveness, and also of “mandarin avoidance"... more »
Beware the “expert” who has suddenly reached some enlightened, politically convenient truth... more »
Rosalind Franklin was deprived of double-helix fame. Was that due to a conspiracy, or plain old sexism?... more »
The idea of exorcism is, in many ways, ridiculous. Yet it lingers, as if nasty spirits were everywhere.... more »
Steven Pinker’s forays into the humanities are like someone with muddy boots entering your house and arrogantly sticking his feet on your table ... more »
Literary study badly needs a new infusion of adrenaline, writes Marjorie Perloff. And so she turns to the work of Yuri Tynianov... more »
Dense, abstract, suspect: Hegel has long been out of favor among Anglophone philosophers. Why all the interest now? ... more »
The methods of connection between author and reader are increasingly owned by Amazon. But ownership does not constitute possession ... more »
Milosz in Berkeley. The Polish-Lithuanian poet's seriousness was at odds with the divine madness of the times... more »
Carl Schmitt's ideas have fresh appeal in a time of authoritarian populism, and nowhere more so than in China ... more »
Futurists are drawn to the sensational and the unlikely: brain uploading, magnetic floating cars. But the actual future will be more like today’s world ... more »
What killed The Believer? For starters: financial distress, a scandal involving the editor, and callous mismanagement... more »
Stephen Crane died at the age of 28. Had he not been so reckless, American literature might now look quite different ... more »
It’s possible to imagine a diversity statement that isn’t an ideological test. But that’s not what we’re seeing on campuses... more »
25 years ago, Alan Sokal perpetrated his hoax on the postmodern professoriate. He won the battle but lost the war... more »
“The way Hannah Arendt lived her life will always be more instructive than the ideas she deduced from it.” ... more »
E.O. Wilson evinces a chummy, no-frills view of himself. It's genuine, as well as crucial to his expansive sense of wonder... more »
What's achieved by liberal and academic calls to "center the most marginalized?" Olúfémi O. Táíwò unpacks standpoint epistemology... more »
"We are all Foucauldians now — in the ways we think about gender, normalization, psychiatry, confinement, surveillance" ... more »
He was a shy college graduate; she was a neurotic 38-year-old mother of two. What was there between Henry Thoreau and Lidian Emerson?... more »
Just how closely related are chimpanzees and humans? A primatologist reflects on a career in ape-language studies... more »
"If you put censors like me in charge, you get a worse situation than if you have people with the freedom to speak up”... more »
Obscure writers squabble, a writer of thrillers makes dubious claims — why are we so enraptured by low-stakes literary misdeeds?... more »
Maggie Nelson’s anti-politics: Her book leaves readers with no permissible action, only a patronizing invitation to manage their own feelings ... more »
The trial of Oscar Wilde tends to be used to distill his character rather than to dramatize its contradictions... more »
Perry Anderson, purveyor of British backwardness, advanced the view that his nation was in perpetual decline. That’s not quite right... more »
If our challenge is to defend liberalism without falling into cynicism or naïveté, Henri Bergson is a thinker for our time... more »
“The sped-up culture that delivers that novel to your doorstep overnight is the same culture that deprives you of the time to read it” ... more »
The mystery of smell. Theoretically the human nose can detect up to a trillion smells — yet we struggle to describe them with any precision... more »
A Cambrian explosion in the world of natural-language processing raises a question: How much of what we write is essentially autocomplete?... more »
The ABCs of AOC, Chelsea Clinton's She Persisted - beware the proliferation of didactic and unimaginative political books for kids... more »
As discreet defecation became a mark of civilized refinement, a taboo topic plagued big cities: dog droppings... more »
Ian Fleming said he wrote for "pleasure and money." True enough, but it shouldn't detract from his literary craftsmanship... more »
For readers, E.M. Forster was a stately, mild-mannered bachelor with a staid personal life. When he came out as gay, many felt betrayed... more »
Jasper Johns, today: Many say he's spent the past 30 years in hermitlike conditions and is now part Scrooge, part sphinx. Nonsense ... more »
Humiliation — why does it hurt so much, do so much damage, twist us so out of shape? Vivian Gornick investigates ... more »
Literary success is increasingly dependent on cultivating a personal brand. John Ashbery reminds us of the power of remaining elusive ... more »
What does a fusty old poet like Yeats have to say now? A whole lot. His poems are "like stethoscopes held up to the hum of a mysterious world"... more »
Left-wing orthodoxy from the Einaudi publishing house once dominated the Italian literary landscape. Then a rival emerged ... more »
In an era obsessed with the political responsibility of the artist, remember what’s lost when art is used for politics. Remember Thomas Mann... more »
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