A quiet revolution has taken place in American fiction. The present has been abandoned for the past
... more »Shakespeare and Freud: What is the proper relation between psychoanalysis and literature?
... more »Studying philosophy has been flattened into a single option: academic. What happens if that goes away?... more »
William the Conqueror doesn’t deserve his reputation for cruelty. In fact, he ushered in an era of chivalrous clemency... more »
Gauguin’s wild 1888 visit to Arles came to an end when Van Gogh hurled an absinthe glass at him — then came at him with a razor... more »
“We will extend our minds many millions-fold by 2045,” writes Ray Kurzweil, the most prominent spokesman for AI messianism... more »
Conservatives are rare among professors. Does it matter? Eleven academics weigh in... more »
East-West trade once went by sea via India, shipping pepper, ivory, cotton, and rhubarb. Is the historical Silk Road a myth? ... more »
Every era recreates Mozart in its own image. In our time, he's a scatological imp who loves four-letter words... more »
In 1953, John Huston asked Ray Bradbury to write a screenplay of Moby-Dick, which Bradbury had never read. That didn’t stop him... more »
Self-help meets the ancien régime in The Habsburg Way, which counsels having lots of children, dying well, and having a memorable funeral... more »
Blasphemy seems like an anachronistic offense. But Salman Rushdie’s case is thoroughly modern... more »
Among a crisis in the humanities, scholars debate whether literary theory is avant-garde or lyric. But why choose?... more »
Sponges, corals, and cephalopods are very different from human beings. Do they nevertheless share aspects of our mental lives?... more »
Disappointments of literary Brooklyn. For one would-be writer, little magazine subculture was alienating and disgusting... more »
99 percent of ancient texts have been lost to history. What’ was lost for millennia may now be found... more »
Marilynne Robinson, pillar of moral seriousness, takes on the book of Genesis. Surprisingly, the result is dogmatism... more »
A real reader, insisted Nabokov, is a rereader. He was wrong, and so is the high-minded horde of rereading evangelists... more »
Remembering Mortimer J. Adler, an intellectually dazzling figure who managed to get all the important things wrong... more »
Some academics insist that children’s literature can be written only by children. "Those academics, incidentally, are off their rockers"... more »
C.L.R. James planned a short trip to “dreadful” America and stayed for 15 years, even as his distaste for U.S. politics grew... more »
The subtle genius of Katharine White. The longtime New Yorker editor was remarkable for being unremarkable... more »
Lead and Zinc Ores of Northumberland and Alston Moor does not sound like children’s literature — yet it was for W.H. Auden... more »
Dickens was a scoundrel; Tolstoy an exploitative sex addict; Alice Walker an anti-Semite. Still, read them ... more »
Invention of a status symbol. How a few lines from a Bruce Chatwin book gave rise to an iconic product... more »
What is most indelible about Simone Weil is her mix of cosmic empathy and aggressive intolerance... more »
In praise of reference books. The best way to satisfy a young and weird mind’s desire for useless knowledge... more »
Christopher Isherwood was not keen to dine with Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne – “Mrs. Misery and Mr. Know-All”... more »
Monstrous motherhood. What can we learn from women who’ve abandoned their children?... more »
Grades at American universities are so inflated they’ve become meaningless. Time to do away with them altogether... more »
Does a paleontological site in North Dakota contain evidence of one of the most dramatic events in the history of the planet?... more »
What it means to be a stone. Rocks can behave in ways that defy our imagination, and increase our access to awe... more »
Is AI-generated writing mimicking us, or are we imitating AI? Resisting the allure of maximal clarity and minimal idiosyncrasies... more »
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky are unlikely titans of Russian literature. Not everyone is pleased... more »
We are all storytellers, certain assumptions embedded in our discursive maneuvers. Has that ability degraded?... more »
Behold the strange and wondrous world of plankton, a vast ecosystem giving rise to the idea of the ocean... more »
People have always been anxious about their health. But their anxiety reflects the preoccupations and peculiarities of each era... more »
Some writers are at their best when denouncing idiocy rather than praising greatness. Consider Christopher Hitchens ... more »
A funny thing happened to Marxist political philosophers. When they stripped away the BS, there was nothing left but liberalism ... more »
“Graffti inserts itself like the blade of a knife between creation and destruction, between publicity and furtiveness, between word and image”... more »
Few poets have suffered more from the early overestimation of critics than Delmore Schwartz. He never quite recovered... more »
Whitewashing Nietzsche. Generations of academics have tried to argue away his appeal to young men... more »
Battles over money. Allegations of racism. A chair ousted. When a college English department self-destructs... more »
The "1812 Overture," Tchaikovsky’s best-known work, is a gaudy monstrosity. One more paradox in a life full of them.... more »
Our decisions are caused by neural mechanisms and biological processes. Even if uncoerced, are they still freely made?... more »
Chomsky was in his teens when he read Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia. It solidified his political convictions... more »
Guy Davenport knew that he was working at the end of a tradition. He was the last high modernist... more »
Literary fame is fickle and fleeting. So what makes a book endure? Lincoln Michel has a few theories... more »
Nazis burned books. But they also sold them, including at a bookstore in Los Angeles... more »
Equality is at the center of liberalism, or so goes the conventional wisdom. But the relationship has long been fraught... more »
The demand to “decolonize” places and things is ubiquitous. What does it mean?... more... more »
The case against having children. "Maybe you’re very sincere about your concerns about a human future. But you’re contradicting yourself"... more »
Nietzsche was a vehement critic of every kind of egalitarianism. Odd that his reputation was rescued by leftist scholars... more »
Matthew Arnold thought Chaucer “lacked high seriousness.” But Shakespeare couldn’t have done without him... more »
Inside the Orwell archive. What crucial discoveries lurk in a warehouse of rusty filing cabinets?... more »
Ideology, totality, utopia, form: Frederic Jameson, now 90, has never wavered in his obsessions... more »
The venerable lab mouse. Its ubiquity in biomedical research is a bizarre accident of history... more »
Tom Wolfe was known for his style. But it was his worldview that made him. David Brooks explains... more »
The desire to unite art and life. The Russian and Soviet avant-garde wasn’t a school or a style. It was a mentality... more »
Film and philosophy. Stanley Cavell yoked Kant with Capra, Hegel with Hepburn. To what end?... more »
Unlocking the Voynich Manuscript’s secrets. Does the medieval document have meaning? Or is it artful nonsense?... more »
The Sylvia Plath stigma. Why are her female readers portrayed as unserious, depressive fangirls?... more »
When women turn life into literature and speak rather than remain silent, we call it gossip... more »
A quiet revolution has taken place in American fiction. The present has been abandoned for the past
... more »William the Conqueror doesn’t deserve his reputation for cruelty. In fact, he ushered in an era of chivalrous clemency... more »
Conservatives are rare among professors. Does it matter? Eleven academics weigh in... more »
In 1953, John Huston asked Ray Bradbury to write a screenplay of Moby-Dick, which Bradbury had never read. That didn’t stop him... more »
Among a crisis in the humanities, scholars debate whether literary theory is avant-garde or lyric. But why choose?... more »
99 percent of ancient texts have been lost to history. What’ was lost for millennia may now be found... more »
Remembering Mortimer J. Adler, an intellectually dazzling figure who managed to get all the important things wrong... more »
The subtle genius of Katharine White. The longtime New Yorker editor was remarkable for being unremarkable... more »
Invention of a status symbol. How a few lines from a Bruce Chatwin book gave rise to an iconic product... more »
Christopher Isherwood was not keen to dine with Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne – “Mrs. Misery and Mr. Know-All”... more »
Does a paleontological site in North Dakota contain evidence of one of the most dramatic events in the history of the planet?... more »
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky are unlikely titans of Russian literature. Not everyone is pleased... more »
People have always been anxious about their health. But their anxiety reflects the preoccupations and peculiarities of each era... more »
“Graffti inserts itself like the blade of a knife between creation and destruction, between publicity and furtiveness, between word and image”... more »
Battles over money. Allegations of racism. A chair ousted. When a college English department self-destructs... more »
Chomsky was in his teens when he read Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia. It solidified his political convictions... more »
Nazis burned books. But they also sold them, including at a bookstore in Los Angeles... more »
The case against having children. "Maybe you’re very sincere about your concerns about a human future. But you’re contradicting yourself"... more »
Inside the Orwell archive. What crucial discoveries lurk in a warehouse of rusty filing cabinets?... more »
Tom Wolfe was known for his style. But it was his worldview that made him. David Brooks explains... more »
Unlocking the Voynich Manuscript’s secrets. Does the medieval document have meaning? Or is it artful nonsense?... more »
Are snails sentient? We need a theory that bridges neurobiology and consciousness. Unfortunately, we have 22... more »
For Vermeer, color conveyed meaning. But are the colors we see today the colors he intended to convey?... more »
The rise and fall of a media empire. Why National Geographic is a cautionary tale for magazines... more »
Paul Bloom on strangling cats, raising kids, and why psychologists aren’t especially savvy about human behavior... more »
Liberalism is everywhere under attack. Is that because of its failures? Or its failures of nerve?... more »
“AI won’t destroy music — but it can radically shift who is making it, what we hear, and why we create it in the first place”... more »
“I want to educate you,” says Glenn Loury. “I don't want to placate you. I'm not here to make you feel better”... more »
James Baldwin recast arguments not as contests to be won but rather as questions to be reframed. Colm Tóibín explains... more »
Plants and philosophy. On the agency and intelligence of a tree... more »
Norman Mailer was not a “bull or a lion or a thunderbolt. He was just, very often, an enormous and unrelenting jerk”... more »
What was it in 1550s England that led to the rise of a new behavior, a new way of thinking? Keeping a diary ... more »
Ninety percent of songs are about love. Why do critics focus on the other 10 percent? Out of shame, mostly. Ted Gioia explains... more »
Lewis Lapham, the elegant and mischievous, patrician and populist editor who reinvented Harper’s, is dead. He was 89... NYTimes... Christian Lorentzen... Kelly Burdick... Nic Rowan... Lapham's Quarterly... more »
E.E. Cummings’s stylistic quirks and preoccupations long ago fell out of favor. What can be gleaned from revisiting his first book?... more »
Travel is both laudable and easy to mock. But its pleasures – and its ills – are actually quite subtle. Phil Christman explains... more »
Arendt and authenticity. There is no true self inside the self, she argued, only inner friction and individual will... more »
How to spot a bad argument. Formal fallacies, informal fallacies, and the dishonest ways we argue today... more »
Martha Foley was instrumental in popularizing the short story as a literary genre. After she died, her own story took a surprising turn... more »
The Library of Congress maintains a collection of more than 175 million objects. How does it decide what to keep?... more »
Shakespeare and Freud: What is the proper relation between psychoanalysis and literature?
... more »Gauguin’s wild 1888 visit to Arles came to an end when Van Gogh hurled an absinthe glass at him — then came at him with a razor... more »
East-West trade once went by sea via India, shipping pepper, ivory, cotton, and rhubarb. Is the historical Silk Road a myth? ... more »
Self-help meets the ancien régime in The Habsburg Way, which counsels having lots of children, dying well, and having a memorable funeral... more »
Sponges, corals, and cephalopods are very different from human beings. Do they nevertheless share aspects of our mental lives?... more »
Marilynne Robinson, pillar of moral seriousness, takes on the book of Genesis. Surprisingly, the result is dogmatism... more »
Some academics insist that children’s literature can be written only by children. "Those academics, incidentally, are off their rockers"... more »
Lead and Zinc Ores of Northumberland and Alston Moor does not sound like children’s literature — yet it was for W.H. Auden... more »
What is most indelible about Simone Weil is her mix of cosmic empathy and aggressive intolerance... more »
Monstrous motherhood. What can we learn from women who’ve abandoned their children?... more »
What it means to be a stone. Rocks can behave in ways that defy our imagination, and increase our access to awe... more »
We are all storytellers, certain assumptions embedded in our discursive maneuvers. Has that ability degraded?... more »
Some writers are at their best when denouncing idiocy rather than praising greatness. Consider Christopher Hitchens ... more »
Few poets have suffered more from the early overestimation of critics than Delmore Schwartz. He never quite recovered... more »
The "1812 Overture," Tchaikovsky’s best-known work, is a gaudy monstrosity. One more paradox in a life full of them.... more »
Guy Davenport knew that he was working at the end of a tradition. He was the last high modernist... more »
Equality is at the center of liberalism, or so goes the conventional wisdom. But the relationship has long been fraught... more »
Nietzsche was a vehement critic of every kind of egalitarianism. Odd that his reputation was rescued by leftist scholars... more »
Ideology, totality, utopia, form: Frederic Jameson, now 90, has never wavered in his obsessions... more »
The desire to unite art and life. The Russian and Soviet avant-garde wasn’t a school or a style. It was a mentality... more »
The Sylvia Plath stigma. Why are her female readers portrayed as unserious, depressive fangirls?... more »
Dickinson and Darwin. The poet's and the naturalist’s lives overlapped, as did their desire to synthesize the material world... more »
Fanny and Louis. She was wild and tiny and central to his literary achievements... more »
Cromwell: The name redounds as shorthand for villainy and political skill. The truth is far more interesting... more »
We’re all Faustians now. What’s at stake isn’t so much our souls as our privacy, along with much else... more »
For 30 years, C.S. Lewis was an Oxford don. The life was just his speed. “I enjoy monotony”... more »
Henry James on Henry James. When he reflected on his own oeuvre, he couldn’t get out of his own way... more »
Women in water. Swimming has long been a hugely important arena to assert autonomy and independence... more »
“It takes a special kind of person, somewhat daft in a socially useful and quite pleasant way but nonetheless somewhat off his head, to give himself to bookselling”... more »
Quantum mechanics initiated not only a scientific revolution but an epistemological upending that is still apparent... more »
Joan Didion is not to blame for the myriad, irksome acolytes she inspired. That doesn’t make them any less insufferable... more »
The upside of ignorance. Our sense of self is partly based on what we don’t know — on being wrong... more »
The most serious objections to the arguments of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus are found in the work itself... more »
Voltaire called Blaise Pascal “the sublime misanthrope.” As much aphorist as philosopher, he was a theologian above all else... more »
Thom Gunn was an old-fashioned modern – existentialist in preoccupation and Elizabethan in form... more »
What did Irving Howe deride as “a strange mixture of Guevarist fantasia, residual Stalinism, anarchist braggadocio and homemade tough-guy methods?'... more »
Delmore Schwartz is best known for his descent into madness and his ruined potential. What about his actual poetry and prose?... more »
Democracy and theater. Ever since the two emerged together in Athens, thinkers have debated the relationship between them... more »
By the 1960s, Nietzsche was about to be marginalized into obscurity. The revival of his reputation was thanks to an Italian philologist... more »
Studying philosophy has been flattened into a single option: academic. What happens if that goes away?... more »
“We will extend our minds many millions-fold by 2045,” writes Ray Kurzweil, the most prominent spokesman for AI messianism... more »
Every era recreates Mozart in its own image. In our time, he's a scatological imp who loves four-letter words... more »
Blasphemy seems like an anachronistic offense. But Salman Rushdie’s case is thoroughly modern... more »
Disappointments of literary Brooklyn. For one would-be writer, little magazine subculture was alienating and disgusting... more »
A real reader, insisted Nabokov, is a rereader. He was wrong, and so is the high-minded horde of rereading evangelists... more »
C.L.R. James planned a short trip to “dreadful” America and stayed for 15 years, even as his distaste for U.S. politics grew... more »
Dickens was a scoundrel; Tolstoy an exploitative sex addict; Alice Walker an anti-Semite. Still, read them ... more »
In praise of reference books. The best way to satisfy a young and weird mind’s desire for useless knowledge... more »
Grades at American universities are so inflated they’ve become meaningless. Time to do away with them altogether... more »
Is AI-generated writing mimicking us, or are we imitating AI? Resisting the allure of maximal clarity and minimal idiosyncrasies... more »
Behold the strange and wondrous world of plankton, a vast ecosystem giving rise to the idea of the ocean... more »
A funny thing happened to Marxist political philosophers. When they stripped away the BS, there was nothing left but liberalism ... more »
Whitewashing Nietzsche. Generations of academics have tried to argue away his appeal to young men... more »
Our decisions are caused by neural mechanisms and biological processes. Even if uncoerced, are they still freely made?... more »
Literary fame is fickle and fleeting. So what makes a book endure? Lincoln Michel has a few theories... more »
The demand to “decolonize” places and things is ubiquitous. What does it mean?... more... more »
Matthew Arnold thought Chaucer “lacked high seriousness.” But Shakespeare couldn’t have done without him... more »
The venerable lab mouse. Its ubiquity in biomedical research is a bizarre accident of history... more »
Film and philosophy. Stanley Cavell yoked Kant with Capra, Hegel with Hepburn. To what end?... more »
When women turn life into literature and speak rather than remain silent, we call it gossip... more »
“I can feel the neurons in my brain struggling and striving. Yes, I can feel it. Now you think I’m crazy.” Anne Carson has Parkinson’s... more »
When the leading lights of physics gathered in Mussolini’s Rome, they clashed over cosmic rays... more »
“Facts don’t change minds because, most often, it’s the framework through which we analyze them that is at stake”... more »
For Montaigne, cruelty was the worst vice. But being mean, however fraught, has definite social value... more »
When a piece of writing exhibits moral excellence, we naturally assume it reflects the morality of the author. That’s often a mistake... more »
An effort is afoot to rescue the humanities’ relevance by pooh-poohing its founding commitments. That won’t work... more »
Great artists make poor propagandists, says Phil Klay. The activist’s job is activism, and the artist’s job is truth ... more »
Elias Canetti described his polemic against death as the book he was born to write. But he couldn’t finish it. He could barely start it... more »
Tristan Foison flourished as a musical fabulist by revealing exactly how classical music ennobles bullshit... more »
History is full of instances when science was subjugated to ideology, and science suffered. Is that happening now in America?... more »
Unlike computers, humans thrive on ambiguity and equivocation, on double entendre and sophistry, on blunders and embarrassments... more »
Oh, Oblomov! “Follow my example, ye small-time yuppies and wage slaves… brothers and sisters led by the nose by dreary, servile little bosses”... more »
Writers are susceptible to pressure from both market and peers. That’s not to say literary excellence isn’t the result of individual genius... more »
What happens if you commit to memorizing a poem every week? Jacob Brogan on the overlooked pleasures of repetition... more »
Note a conspicuous absence in contemporary literature: the unfiltered voice of raw manhood on the page
... more »
An old and fraught strain of historiography is resurgent: history as not simply a record but as sacred oracle... more »
Does a free and competitive marketplace of ideas generate truth? Or does it simply respond to – and even exacerbate – people’s biases?... more »
TikTok has a billion users clamoring to be part of the zeitgeist. Why can't they stop scrolling? Roxane Gay falls down a rabbit hole... more »
Do we extract moral wisdom from reading? Or is reading itself a form of moral instruction?... more »
Critics have traded the pleasure of reading for disenchanted explanations of what the books we enjoy say about us rather than what they say to us... more »
Do the world's museums, many of which are filled with treasures from the colonial era, have a future? Of course they do!... more »
Surrealism then and now. In the late '60s, the movement was outflanked by the left. Now it's been passed on the right... more »
Solzhenitsyn's warning. After the gulag, he smelled intellectual rot wherever he went. Naive killjoy or vindicated prophet?... more »
Is a public philosophy still possible? Don’t confuse intellectual titillation with the examined life... more »
"The historian-as-self-appointed-indispensable-public-adviser-on-current-politics collapsed into a pile of pretty evident absurdity"... more »
How is it that some writers can be so moral on the page and so cruel in their lives? Consider Alice Munro... more »
“Marlowe endures as a parallel universe Bard, a kind of shadowy counter-Shakespeare, the great, queer, sacrilegious poet and playwright of damnation”... more »
Whatever Foucault’s sins, his liberal critics have him wrong. He didn’t start the identitarian culture war... more »
It's a gas! The strange story of the discovery that nitrous oxide creates delusions and blocks pain... more »
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