Is “world literature“” a framework for engaging works one might otherwise neglect, or just an excuse to raid and profit off international writing?... more »
In America, science was shaped by the CIA, the State Department, and the Cold War. But that doesn’t mean it’s necessarily without intellectual integrity... more »
Where books matter. Americans usually assume that literature exists to depict life, while Russians often speak as if life exists to provide material for literature... more »
The case of the counterfeit Animal Farm. Inundated with fakes, Amazon says authors and publishers will have to police the market... more »
To understand Whitman’s impact on present-day writing, look no further than a poetic project on delight — delight in cardinals, in log piles, in nicknames... more »
No, Sally Rooney is not the “great millennial novelist.” This generation is too diverse for that — its books seek specific audiences, not universal ones... more »
During World War I, Thomas Mann performed “intellectual military service” for Germany; by World War II, he was Hitler’s personal antagonist... more »
Lincoln was out of his depth politically. Moral hazard in banking isn’t a serious threat. Walter Bagehot had a talent for epic miscalculation... more »
Alcoholic writers are mythologized — but consider their pain. “Heavy drinking is a substitute for companionship,” Bukowski said, “and it’s a substitute for suicide”... more »
Our Graham in Havana. Graham Greene’s interventions in Cuban politics were hardly fictional — he actually contributed to Batista’s downfall... more »
The intellectual coward. Victor Serge knew the type: playing word games, dabbling in fashionable politics, inciting “nothing but a revolt of literary cafes”... more »
Charles Sanders Peirce was an intellectual titan, an American Aristotle. His obscurity stems from the abstruseness of his ideas and the machinations of his rivals... more »
Ayn Rand always held a certain appeal to precocious, contrarian youngsters. Now all the cool kids want to be socialists... more »
The rise and fall of an imperial discipline. Economics once wielded vast political influence, but is the intellectual marketplace now moving on?... more »
The doomsayers rant that English is in decline, that we're speaking a degraded, faltering tongue. They've been saying so since the 14th century... more »
“Natural and unconstrained.” Nudism in America was shaped by Whitman, Thoreau, German philosophy, and the American Sunbathing Association... more »
Eric Hobsbawm's parents died within a span of two years, from heart attack and lung disease. The teenager found a new family in the Communist Party... more »
“Wake up, stay woke!” How a famously liberal liberal-arts college came to act like a small-minded, vindictive corporation... more »
Beware of book bandits. Aspiring authors are easy marks, or so suggests the history of swindling and literary scams... more »
Were Beethoven’s works politically charged? The historical context encourages such a view, but the music itself suggests something murkier... more »
When Umberto Eco died, obituarists struggled to explain his project. It was to explode the line dividing high and popular culture... more »
Against petitions. "Being confronted with an arsenal of experts is about as conducive to conversation as a firing squad"... more »
Iris Murdoch likened language to a net cast over the mind, constraining thoughts according to the landings of its knots and threads... more »
Democracy is in crisis! Or so warns a gaggle of alarmist books — all of which seem to poorly grasp how democracy actually works... more »
Baloney, hooey, bullshit: The social dynamics of debunking are a strange collaboration among debunker, charlatan, and dupe... more »
Let us praise the semicolon, the punctuation that helps us pause and think as it pushes us forward to what's next... more »
Efficiency for what? We talk of “optimizing” our diets, exercise, and appearance, but rarely of optimizing child care or political representation... more »
Born into a famed Indian literary family, Dom Moraes mingled with Eliot and Auden. But just when his career in poetry took off, he stopped writing... more »
Sexism and anthropology. Margaret Mead was fearless in her investigations of culture. But later, who could protect her academic reputation from vicious attacks?... more »
Being David Foster Wallace’s pen pal meant, at least for Susan Barnett, quips, dog discussions, and tolerating endless come-ons... more »
A shadowy publisher who calls himself “El Jefe,” royalty checks gone missing, a crisis: Behold, the literary equivalent of the Fyre Festival... more »
Film’s forgotten man Robert G. Haines appeared, as an extra, in many of the greatest movies ever made. What does his omnipresence mean?... more »
For Claude Lévi-Strauss, studying man is like studying a mollusk: One must find the geometric beauty of the task... more »
The revolt of the feminist law profs. When social-justice goals were advanced at the cost of due process, Jeannie Suk Gersen stepped in... more »
The way we think about derivative translations and pure originals is all wrong. It rests on clichés and lazy approaches... more »
Despite a plethora of aesthetic points of view, there is still a line between respecting bad taste and being complicit in it... more »
Was email a mistake? We check our inboxes every few minutes, wearied by the deluge, yet applaud ourselves for eliminating the need to speak face-to-face... more »
A poetic friendship is born: Wordsworth had just abandoned his daughter; Coleridge then abandoned his own family to spend more time with Wordsworth... more »
"I write this because I’m dying as a poet," says Bob Hicok. "I’m a straight white guy, and the face of poetry is finally changing"... more »
Toni Morrison, whose work enlarged the American imagination in ways we are only beginning to understand, is dead. She was 88… Vinson Cunningham… Dwight Garner… The Paris Review… Washington Post… Hannah Giorgis… Tracy K. Smith... Wesley Morris... Ron Charles... Doreen St. Félix... Troy Patterson... Kevin Brown... Hilton Als... Roxane Gay... Michelle Obama and others...... more »
The challenge facing any biographer of Frederick Douglass: Work your way behind the self-made public hero of the autobiographies and find the private man... more »
H. G. Wells, diviner of the future. The art of prediction is difficult, he determined, and thus warrants an academic solution: “Professors of Foresight”... more »
Wittgenstein said you could write a whole philosophy of the human condition using only jokes. So what can we learn from the jokes told under Stalin?... more »
Simone Weil was devoted to alleviating the suffering of others. André Weil, her brother, was devoted to numbers. He became a great mathematician; she became unhinged... more »
John Ruskin’s literary reputation is in tatters, but he offered some wisdom. For example: “The most beautiful things in the world are the most useless”... more »
The publisher Faber & Faber was derided at first as “a bunch of Oxford amateurs; won’t last.” Passion, shrewdness, and luck have kept it afloat for 90 years... more »
Digressions galore, head-scratching logic, and a 26-sentence paragraph. A new biography of Chaucer is “a jargon-ridden exercise in academic colonialism”... more »
“We are sick of you and your weird diseases, go home!” A tour of the red-light district of Amsterdam with Oliver Sacks... more »
A tale of murder in the wild. Where the Crawdads Sing, the “feel-good publishing story of the year,” faces some uncomfortable allegations... more »
How do we spend our time? We overestimate how much we work and exercise, and we're no busier than we were a few decades ago. We just think we are... more »
“You sit in a plaza and it occurs to you that other people have been in your situation, whatever it is, and this knowledge is at the heart of civility”... more »
Italian humanists wrote with a mishmash of dots, dashes, swoops, and curlicues. Their most successful experiment in punctuation? The semicolon... more »
Moral panics have traditionally been an indulgence of the right. Now they're associated with the woke left. What happened?... more »
Science has a data problem — its reliance on “statistical significance” has thrown it into disarray. An alternative standard beckons... more »
Kwame Anthony Appiah on dispensing ethical advice, the ephemerality of pop music, and the psychic benefits of being a sheep... more »
Who kicked the snakes out of Ireland? For 500 years, that honor went to a Celtic saint, Columba. Then the cult of Patrick intervened... more »
To celebrate a work, Jackson Pollock got drunk, arrived naked at a party, and urinated in the fireplace. Or so said Peggy Guggenheim... more »
Ain't no party like an existentialist party. De Beauvoir smoked joints. Sartre took amphetamines and mescaline. But alcohol was tops... more »
A new book on the culture of UFO believers shows how the scholarly study of strange things can have strange effects... more »
How to rebuild Notre-Dame? Make it modern, some say, with a spire of glass or even crystal. Witold Rybczynski dissents... more »
Corbin Gwaltney, visionary and mercurial founding editor of The Chronicle of Higher Education, is dead. He was 97. Arts & Letters Daily wouldn't exist without him... more »
Bruno Schulz dreamed of writing “The Book” — a singular, ideal work of literature. But magical imaginings can’t withstand the ordeal of their realization... more »
A cache of Saul Bellow letters is discovered in the attic of a private residence — more evidence that the man was incapable of writing a boring sentence... more »
Is “world literature“” a framework for engaging works one might otherwise neglect, or just an excuse to raid and profit off international writing?... more »
The case of the counterfeit Animal Farm. Inundated with fakes, Amazon says authors and publishers will have to police the market... more »
During World War I, Thomas Mann performed “intellectual military service” for Germany; by World War II, he was Hitler’s personal antagonist... more »
Our Graham in Havana. Graham Greene’s interventions in Cuban politics were hardly fictional — he actually contributed to Batista’s downfall... more »
Ayn Rand always held a certain appeal to precocious, contrarian youngsters. Now all the cool kids want to be socialists... more »
“Natural and unconstrained.” Nudism in America was shaped by Whitman, Thoreau, German philosophy, and the American Sunbathing Association... more »
Beware of book bandits. Aspiring authors are easy marks, or so suggests the history of swindling and literary scams... more »
Against petitions. "Being confronted with an arsenal of experts is about as conducive to conversation as a firing squad"... more »
Baloney, hooey, bullshit: The social dynamics of debunking are a strange collaboration among debunker, charlatan, and dupe... more »
Born into a famed Indian literary family, Dom Moraes mingled with Eliot and Auden. But just when his career in poetry took off, he stopped writing... more »
A shadowy publisher who calls himself “El Jefe,” royalty checks gone missing, a crisis: Behold, the literary equivalent of the Fyre Festival... more »
The revolt of the feminist law profs. When social-justice goals were advanced at the cost of due process, Jeannie Suk Gersen stepped in... more »
Was email a mistake? We check our inboxes every few minutes, wearied by the deluge, yet applaud ourselves for eliminating the need to speak face-to-face... more »
Toni Morrison, whose work enlarged the American imagination in ways we are only beginning to understand, is dead. She was 88… Vinson Cunningham… Dwight Garner… The Paris Review… Washington Post… Hannah Giorgis… Tracy K. Smith... Wesley Morris... Ron Charles... Doreen St. Félix... Troy Patterson... Kevin Brown... Hilton Als... Roxane Gay... Michelle Obama and others...... more »
Wittgenstein said you could write a whole philosophy of the human condition using only jokes. So what can we learn from the jokes told under Stalin?... more »
The publisher Faber & Faber was derided at first as “a bunch of Oxford amateurs; won’t last.” Passion, shrewdness, and luck have kept it afloat for 90 years... more »
A tale of murder in the wild. Where the Crawdads Sing, the “feel-good publishing story of the year,” faces some uncomfortable allegations... more »
Italian humanists wrote with a mishmash of dots, dashes, swoops, and curlicues. Their most successful experiment in punctuation? The semicolon... more »
Kwame Anthony Appiah on dispensing ethical advice, the ephemerality of pop music, and the psychic benefits of being a sheep... more »
Ain't no party like an existentialist party. De Beauvoir smoked joints. Sartre took amphetamines and mescaline. But alcohol was tops... more »
Corbin Gwaltney, visionary and mercurial founding editor of The Chronicle of Higher Education, is dead. He was 97. Arts & Letters Daily wouldn't exist without him... more »
The diary of Samuel Pepys, from 1660 to 1669, reveals a moral mess of a man living and thriving in a particularly messy time ... more »
College teaches us to read professionally — to extract useful information with scientific precision. Sometimes that’s a skill we must abandon... more »
It is no secret that John Keats was intensely fascinated with death. But was he a grave robber?... more »
Three anthropologists, caught in a gin-fueled, malarial fog, believed they had cracked the riddle of culture. They hadn't... more »
“Believe me, I am not mad!” insisted Herman Melville, in response to frequent questions. Helping keep him sane: his beloved farm... more »
Alan Lomax changed the music Americans listened to and the way they listen. Why is his work rejected by most ethnomusicologists today?... more »
The wit and wisdom of the writers of the Algonquin Round Table are legendary. As for the group's larger significance, there isn’t much of one... more »
In 1965 the varied landscape of book publishing began its consolidation into the conglomerate era. Has that changed the stories we tell?... more »
A conundrum lies at the heart of Georges Perec’s work: Is it possible to write about the unimaginable cruelty with the infantile levity of a jigsaw puzzle?... more »
Who are the most influential intellectuals? Prospect offers a list of the 50 thinkers explaining and changing the world... more »
What works of art define our age? The New York Times asks artists and critics an impossible question... more »
Bob Dylan fans can be insufferable obsessives, with a surfeit of trivia and a dearth of understanding. What about Dylan scholars?... more »
Arson, self-mutilation, vandalism, perhaps even terrorism — Pyotr Pavlensky’s guerrilla art has landed him in jail. If that won’t stop him, what will?... more »
Gore Vidal dedicated Myra Breckinridge to Christopher Isherwood, who called it a “very subtle psychological self-portrait.” He was more right than he knew... more »
“The clothes we wear today are anachronistic, irrational, and harmful.” Why are we such fans of pockets, buttons, and zippers? Bernard Rudofsky had a theory... more »
The so-called marketplace of ideas is broken. Turns out that neither markets nor people can be counted on to embrace the rational or the true... more »
Intellectuals alone stand against bloodlust and mob mentality, and in doing so make up society’s moral compass. Or so holds Pankaj Mishra... more »
The Great Awakening. For centuries, humans have been growing weaker. Was Rousseau right to lament this, or is there an upside to our enfeeblement?... more »
Art and finance have a natural affinity and a longtime connection. Investors, in giving rise to modern and contemporary art, shaped the overheated market of today... more »
In America, science was shaped by the CIA, the State Department, and the Cold War. But that doesn’t mean it’s necessarily without intellectual integrity... more »
To understand Whitman’s impact on present-day writing, look no further than a poetic project on delight — delight in cardinals, in log piles, in nicknames... more »
Lincoln was out of his depth politically. Moral hazard in banking isn’t a serious threat. Walter Bagehot had a talent for epic miscalculation... more »
The intellectual coward. Victor Serge knew the type: playing word games, dabbling in fashionable politics, inciting “nothing but a revolt of literary cafes”... more »
The rise and fall of an imperial discipline. Economics once wielded vast political influence, but is the intellectual marketplace now moving on?... more »
Eric Hobsbawm's parents died within a span of two years, from heart attack and lung disease. The teenager found a new family in the Communist Party... more »
Were Beethoven’s works politically charged? The historical context encourages such a view, but the music itself suggests something murkier... more »
Iris Murdoch likened language to a net cast over the mind, constraining thoughts according to the landings of its knots and threads... more »
Let us praise the semicolon, the punctuation that helps us pause and think as it pushes us forward to what's next... more »
Sexism and anthropology. Margaret Mead was fearless in her investigations of culture. But later, who could protect her academic reputation from vicious attacks?... more »
Film’s forgotten man Robert G. Haines appeared, as an extra, in many of the greatest movies ever made. What does his omnipresence mean?... more »
The way we think about derivative translations and pure originals is all wrong. It rests on clichés and lazy approaches... more »
A poetic friendship is born: Wordsworth had just abandoned his daughter; Coleridge then abandoned his own family to spend more time with Wordsworth... more »
The challenge facing any biographer of Frederick Douglass: Work your way behind the self-made public hero of the autobiographies and find the private man... more »
Simone Weil was devoted to alleviating the suffering of others. André Weil, her brother, was devoted to numbers. He became a great mathematician; she became unhinged... more »
Digressions galore, head-scratching logic, and a 26-sentence paragraph. A new biography of Chaucer is “a jargon-ridden exercise in academic colonialism”... more »
How do we spend our time? We overestimate how much we work and exercise, and we're no busier than we were a few decades ago. We just think we are... more »
Moral panics have traditionally been an indulgence of the right. Now they're associated with the woke left. What happened?... more »
Who kicked the snakes out of Ireland? For 500 years, that honor went to a Celtic saint, Columba. Then the cult of Patrick intervened... more »
A new book on the culture of UFO believers shows how the scholarly study of strange things can have strange effects... more »
Bruno Schulz dreamed of writing “The Book” — a singular, ideal work of literature. But magical imaginings can’t withstand the ordeal of their realization... more »
"Are we having fun, or are we in a hell where we’re merely communicating, learning too little too quickly, melting our brains into the abyssal portal?" How we talk online... more »
Is the recent vogue for socialism sufficent to revive the moribund reputation of Nelson Algren, arch-poet of destitution and degradation?... more »
When his fiancée wanted to try mesmerism, Hawthorne panicked: “There would be an intrusion into thy holy of holies — and the intruder would not be thy husband!”... more »
The ways we come to change our minds demonstrate the richness and strangeness of human reason... more »
Racist. Exploiter of children, animals, and the disabled. Abolitionist. Humorist: Who was P.T. Barnum?... more »
Rudyard Kipling was born in India to English parents. How did he come to spend his most creative years in Vermont?... more »
A historian’s historian and a scholar prized by a popular audience, Eric Hobsbawm was Zelig-like in his presence at world-historical moments... more »
For all the praise of Robert Caro, some aspects of his process go unremarked. He doesn’t psychoanalyze or generalize — he is the antitheoretical reporter ... more »
Plato associated laughter with loss of self-control. Epictetus never laughed at all. What's the philosophical significance of funny?... more »
“We do not,” says Nicholas Christakis, “find a functional society without love, friendship, cooperation, or personal identity.” How hard has he looked?... more »
Iris Murdoch has fallen out of fashion, but her work is worth retrieving as a moral philosophy with a steely-eyed suspicion of intellectual confidence... more »
Big books remind us how hard the work of understanding can be. Aphorisms offer "a micro-model of empirical inquiry"... more »
Jenny Odell’s defense of empathy, attention, and doing nothing contains much that is true and little that is fresh... more »
Chaucer has been reduced to “Jolly Geoff,” an unserious and ribald writer. Time to repair the reputation of the father of English poetry... more »
Why miniatures matter. Alluring and inaccessible, they represent possibility and impossibility at once. They are tiny, but infinite in what they evoke... more »
A literary celebration of the condom’s invention, 1744’s The Machine, or Love’s Preservative hailed he who “arm’d thus boldly wages am’rous Fight”... more »
Telepathy, metamorphoses, fairy counterparts that haunt us in the shadows — so proposed a serious-minded 17th-century Scottish minister... more »
What becomes of science when evidence is absent – as it is in some areas of physics? Other criteria, including aesthetic ones, come into play. So does speculation... more »
Where books matter. Americans usually assume that literature exists to depict life, while Russians often speak as if life exists to provide material for literature... more »
No, Sally Rooney is not the “great millennial novelist.” This generation is too diverse for that — its books seek specific audiences, not universal ones... more »
Alcoholic writers are mythologized — but consider their pain. “Heavy drinking is a substitute for companionship,” Bukowski said, “and it’s a substitute for suicide”... more »
Charles Sanders Peirce was an intellectual titan, an American Aristotle. His obscurity stems from the abstruseness of his ideas and the machinations of his rivals... more »
The doomsayers rant that English is in decline, that we're speaking a degraded, faltering tongue. They've been saying so since the 14th century... more »
“Wake up, stay woke!” How a famously liberal liberal-arts college came to act like a small-minded, vindictive corporation... more »
When Umberto Eco died, obituarists struggled to explain his project. It was to explode the line dividing high and popular culture... more »
Democracy is in crisis! Or so warns a gaggle of alarmist books — all of which seem to poorly grasp how democracy actually works... more »
Efficiency for what? We talk of “optimizing” our diets, exercise, and appearance, but rarely of optimizing child care or political representation... more »
Being David Foster Wallace’s pen pal meant, at least for Susan Barnett, quips, dog discussions, and tolerating endless come-ons... more »
For Claude Lévi-Strauss, studying man is like studying a mollusk: One must find the geometric beauty of the task... more »
Despite a plethora of aesthetic points of view, there is still a line between respecting bad taste and being complicit in it... more »
"I write this because I’m dying as a poet," says Bob Hicok. "I’m a straight white guy, and the face of poetry is finally changing"... more »
H. G. Wells, diviner of the future. The art of prediction is difficult, he determined, and thus warrants an academic solution: “Professors of Foresight”... more »
John Ruskin’s literary reputation is in tatters, but he offered some wisdom. For example: “The most beautiful things in the world are the most useless”... more »
“We are sick of you and your weird diseases, go home!” A tour of the red-light district of Amsterdam with Oliver Sacks... more »
“You sit in a plaza and it occurs to you that other people have been in your situation, whatever it is, and this knowledge is at the heart of civility”... more »
Science has a data problem — its reliance on “statistical significance” has thrown it into disarray. An alternative standard beckons... more »
To celebrate a work, Jackson Pollock got drunk, arrived naked at a party, and urinated in the fireplace. Or so said Peggy Guggenheim... more »
How to rebuild Notre-Dame? Make it modern, some say, with a spire of glass or even crystal. Witold Rybczynski dissents... more »
A cache of Saul Bellow letters is discovered in the attic of a private residence — more evidence that the man was incapable of writing a boring sentence... more »
Nineteenth-century Paris was not a good place for female artists, as Berthe Morisot and her sister discovered. As Manet put it, “It’s annoying they’re not men”... more »
Against mindfulness. Sold as a remedy for all occasions, it oversimplifies the difficult business of understanding oneself... more »
When Max Weber began his talk "Politics as a Vocation," he did so with ambivalence. "This lecture," he said, "will necessarily disappoint you"... more »
There are many casualties in trying to quantify student learning. Is the link between metaphor and imagination one of them?... more »
What does it cost to be a citizen of the literary world? Time, for one thing. But the demands we make of women writers are outsize ... more »
The December 1937 issue of Partisan Review featured works by Trilling, Wilson, and Picasso. But that's not why it was a milestone... more »
"Our most elite universities are today running away from their elitism.” But elitism, argues Anthony Kronman, is "something to be cherished and cared for"... more »
When it comes to syntax, Lionel Shriver throws in her lot with the pedants. How else to arrest semantic drift?... more »
John Stuart Mill was famous; Lord Byron was a celebrity. The distinction is rooted in history, culture, and how we consume our icons... more »
The moon landing wasn't so much a triumph of science or a testament to the expansion of human horizons. The triumph was aesthetic... more »
We flinch in the face of the Bible's misery and violence, chauvinism and misogyny, idealism and generosity, forgiveness and humaneness... more »
Defense of the hipster. The mid-2000s aesthetic is much loathed, but its critics miss a crucial point: Even superficial movements matter... more »
Walking has long been an essential literary act. But why do advocates of a good stretch of the legs have to be so damn smug about it?... more »
J.B.S. Haldane created the field of population genetics and fought in the Spanish Civil War. But it's his quotability for which he is remembered... more »
In 2001, John J. Lennon killed a rival drug dealer. Eighteen years of incarceration later, he reflects on the trials of literary life behind bars... more »
So photos of meals on Instagram are nothing but food porn? Let's not be so cynical. What if those pictures are a new incarnation of an ancient instinct: prayer?... more »
In his final years, Manet painted tiny, beautiful works. His critics dismissed these as prettified diversions, but he was after something larger... more »
Dramatic horseback escapes, false identities. The Cold War’s first global manhunt wasn’t for a spy. It was for Pablo Neruda... more »
Tolstoy memorably described boredom as “the desire for desires.” Erich Fromm called it "one of the greatest tortures." But what's lost when we lose the ability to be bored?... more »
Academics think their work is timeless, like 13th-century monks’ transcriptions of Aristotle’s Poetics. Yet never underestimate the power of trendiness... more »
As Margaret Atwood has said, “every utopia contains a little dystopia” — something certainly true of Victorian fiction’s all-female paradises... more »
“Why the books? Why the babies? Why the essays? Why so many, why so fast?” Jill Lepore reveals her motivation — the memory of a brilliant friend... more »
Natalia Ginzburg’s family — left-leaning Jews in Fascist Italy — watched in horror as terror, internal exile, and prison began to permeate “ordinary” life... more »
The history of the poster. The form, which inspired dress-up parties in 1890s Paris, went on to be celebrated by Russian constructivists and derided by Sontag... more »
“The way to one’s own heaven,” wrote Nietzsche, “always leads through the voluptuousness of one’s own hell.” Could happiness exist without hell?... more »
Death of the anonymous author. If algorithms can pinpoint the identity of a writer — say, Elena Ferrante — does art as a whole lose out?... more »
To constantly pursue something you can never catch is a form of madness. Yet that's exactly what we do by pursuing happiness... more »
Intellectuals agree: Unlike our ancestors, we live in a disenchanted society. But what of our obsession with healing crystals, chakras, and the occult?... more »
Iris Murdoch was that great, rare thing — a writer whose vision made you feel the sublime. Why aren't her books more widely read?... more »
New material is added to Arts & Letters Daily six days a week.
Our motto, "Veritas odit moras," is found at line 850 of Seneca's version of Oedipus. It means "Truth hates delay."
Founding Editor (1998-2010): Denis Dutton
Editor: Evan Goldstein
Managing Editor: Tran Huu Dung
Assistant Editor: David Wescott
Copy Editor: Mitch Gerber
© 1998 — 2019
Arts & Letters Daily is brought to you by
The Chronicle of Higher Education
