Why were doctors and nurses uniquely attracted to Nazi philosophy, enlisting in much higher proportions than any other profession? ... more »
Is strongman a useful category for political analysis? A new book stretches the definition beyond its limits... more »
J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis sought to transform the world by reintroducing old stories. Nearly a century later, they’ve been remarkably successful ... more »
Just 11 percent of books published by large presses in 2018 were written by people of color. Why is publishing so white?... more »
Philip Roth, Jewish patron saint of rage and writing, never forgave ex-wives, nosy neighbors, or scathing critics. His thin skin grew thinner over the years... more »
Before the Gilded Age, classical music was on par with juggling acts and vaudeville tunes. Beer — not wine — flowed. What changed?... more »
For Barbara Guest, writing poetry meant no planning — just waiting for a poem to compose itself spontaneously... more »
When people struggle to read a classic like the Iliad, it’s not because of a moral aversion. It’s because they’re bored and confused ... more »
Consider pinnacles of literary culture: Elizabethan England, 19th-century Russia, Flaubert’s France. America, in 2020, is at the other end of that spectrum ... more »
“Steer clear of adjectives!” is an ancient piece of writerly wisdom. And yet adjectives are what reveal the genius of writers like Nabokov and Borges... more »
What’s behind the highbrow hostility to works of self-help? It’s the status anxiety of professional critics, argues a new book... more »
For the academic left, science is a hegemonic force with sweeping authority over the modern world. But that misunderstands science ... more »
Was Orwell's reputation protected by his early death? He avoided several controversies that would have altered how we see him ... more »
Beneath Thorstein Veblen’s austere exterior and grim scowl lurked a dimly perceptible reservoir of hope ... more »
Now bludgeoned by liberals, the idea of American exceptionalism was itself a creation of the left ... more »
The tortured letters of T.S. Eliot and Emily Hale. He was a married man writing incessantly and “tampering insidiously” with her mind ... more »
Michel Gallimard and Albert Camus were killed in a car crash in 1960. Gallimard was driving fast, but was foul play the true cause? ... more »
What does the pandemic portend for the arts in America? We can’t even agree that culture matters, much less how to protect it ... more »
What is cancel culture? Does it even exist? Ligaya Mishan has the long and tortured history ... more »
Graham Greene's restlessness — a new country, a new woman — shaped his work and wrecked his life ... more »
People who grouse about cultural appropriation aren't just puritanical; they don't respect the anarchic energies of art... more »
How did Citizen Kane become the greatest movie of all? Blame the French film critics who first recognized it as a masterpiece ... more »
What's right about rights and wrong with virtues? Rights don't depend on those who suppose themselves to be virtuous ... more »
Modern poetry is intimidating. But you don’t need expertise in ekphrasis to appreciate Ross Gay, Frank Bidart, and Ada Limón ... more »
How did Kurt, feckless Ivy frat boy, became Vonnegut, satirist to the galaxy? His early love letters offer clues ... more »
Kate Manne’s consideration of misogyny is full of mockery, condemnation, and fatalism. We deserve better from our public intellectuals ... more »
Era of cant. Wherever people are punished for expressing an unorthodox opinion, humbug is bound to flourish ... more »
For the philosopher Alphonso Lingis, goodness and exultation are central to our sense of self. “How good it is to be alive!” ... more »
Michael Sandel’s critique of meritocracy misses something obvious: Merit and credentials are not synonymous ... more »
The art of artificial intelligence. Are we at the dawn of a new medium? If so, it would portend a doleful future ... more »
How did Roger Penrose pioneer a renaissance of gravity theory? He had the wisdom to ignore academic fashion ... more »
It was a neoclassical homage, “empire style,” “gauzy nudity.” In the late 18th century, a clinging white bedgown was the height of fashion ... more »
Gone are the days of voracious nerding out in the academy. Such work must now demonstrate a new moral piety ... more »
Corresponding with her future husband earned Adrienne Rich a rebuke from her father. Trading one man for another was hardly emancipation... more »
Like a nightmarish accordion, Kafka’s “lost” writings expand, trapping readers in their complexities. They make no easy task for the critic... more »
“The difficulty of making out the plain sense of poetry.” Literary studies faces a foundational problem: Making distinctions comes with diminishing returns... more »
How has America changed Yiddish? Simple: It’s killed it. How has Yiddish changed America? That’s more complicated ... more »
Thorstein Veblen seemed intent on torching every school of thought. Does the academy still produce such thinkers? ... more »
Montaigne studied classical philosophy but claimed to learn nothing from it — the only moral authority he recognized was his own ... more »
William S. Burroughs didn't care much for music. Yet for a generation of musicians, he was a singular influence ... more »
The Ferrante Letters, a supposedly experimental critical project, ventures little beyond textual analysis. Quelle horreur!... more »
America is a government of words, our language shaping our politics. Which is why we need critics like David Bromwich ... more »
Can a machine think like a physicist? That’s the promise of artificial intelligence and quantum computing. Is it realistic? ... more »
“Fail fast,” “fail better” — we celebrate failure as something inevitable on the path to success. That’s nonsense ... more »
"The artist is of no importance. Only what he creates is important,” said William Faulkner, as if he knew his personal failings would diminish his professional reputation ... more »
Frida in France. The accommodations were unsatisfactory; the politics, lamentable; the intellectuals, boring. But there was a silver lining... more »
Down with occurrences! Our politics, wars, triumphs, and failures are mere “surface disturbances” and “crests of foam” on the great sea of history ... more »
Genius is, among other things, a personality-laundering scheme. Boorish behavior is reclassified as charming idiosyncrasy. Agnes Callard explains ... more »
The science of personal space. Lessons from zebras, porcupines, and people show how close is too close for comfort ... more »
The question of how to live has long flummoxed great minds. But not cats: They have nothing to learn from philosophy... more »
Henry Adams, American aristocrat. His friends adored him, but his “distilled and vitriolic mockery” was an acquired taste ... more »
Pankaj Mishra: We focus too much on minor disputes, ignoring the reality that “the default intellectual culture in Anglo-America is overwhelmingly right wing”... more »
The clock, the astrolabe, the university — the so-called “Dark Ages” produced some of our most important tools and concepts. It’s time to revisit the period... more »
The right-wing Medievalist Ernst Kantorowicz once killed Communists. Later, at Berkeley, he refused to sign a Cold War loyalty oath. Why?... more »
Man of many dreams. In the early 1930s, the physicist Wolfgang Pauli began recording his dreams for Carl Jung. Somehow he remembered 1,300 of them ... more »
The Didion gaze. What makes her work fascinating is also what makes it rare: a woman looking at men and not looking away ... more »
Freud’s philosophy of grief. How the loss of a daughter shaped a father’s understanding of death ... more »
Rose Dugdale was a 33-year-old British heiress with a Ph.D. and a glowing recommendation from Iris Murdoch. How did she end up an art thief? ... more »
Why did the West rise? Meritocracy, democracy, trust, innovation, and restraint, argues a new book. But was it really so simple?... more »
Harold Bloom’s last book is lazy, solipsistic, vague, and plain wrong. It suggests that he may have misunderstood literature all along... more »
An “economy of favors.” Poetry prizes suffer from reciprocity: judges give awards to those who have given them awards... more »
From the “morally hideous” to the terroristically violent, Kate Manne offers a clear taxonomy of misogyny. And yet no vision for the future emerges ... more »
Feynman, Hawking, and Herschel all insist that empirical evidence is the sole truth of science. Do they protest too much? ... more »
Why were doctors and nurses uniquely attracted to Nazi philosophy, enlisting in much higher proportions than any other profession? ... more »
Just 11 percent of books published by large presses in 2018 were written by people of color. Why is publishing so white?... more »
For Barbara Guest, writing poetry meant no planning — just waiting for a poem to compose itself spontaneously... more »
“Steer clear of adjectives!” is an ancient piece of writerly wisdom. And yet adjectives are what reveal the genius of writers like Nabokov and Borges... more »
Was Orwell's reputation protected by his early death? He avoided several controversies that would have altered how we see him ... more »
The tortured letters of T.S. Eliot and Emily Hale. He was a married man writing incessantly and “tampering insidiously” with her mind ... more »
What is cancel culture? Does it even exist? Ligaya Mishan has the long and tortured history ... more »
How did Citizen Kane become the greatest movie of all? Blame the French film critics who first recognized it as a masterpiece ... more »
How did Kurt, feckless Ivy frat boy, became Vonnegut, satirist to the galaxy? His early love letters offer clues ... more »
For the philosopher Alphonso Lingis, goodness and exultation are central to our sense of self. “How good it is to be alive!” ... more »
How did Roger Penrose pioneer a renaissance of gravity theory? He had the wisdom to ignore academic fashion ... more »
Corresponding with her future husband earned Adrienne Rich a rebuke from her father. Trading one man for another was hardly emancipation... more »
How has America changed Yiddish? Simple: It’s killed it. How has Yiddish changed America? That’s more complicated ... more »
William S. Burroughs didn't care much for music. Yet for a generation of musicians, he was a singular influence ... more »
Can a machine think like a physicist? That’s the promise of artificial intelligence and quantum computing. Is it realistic? ... more »
Frida in France. The accommodations were unsatisfactory; the politics, lamentable; the intellectuals, boring. But there was a silver lining... more »
The science of personal space. Lessons from zebras, porcupines, and people show how close is too close for comfort ... more »
Pankaj Mishra: We focus too much on minor disputes, ignoring the reality that “the default intellectual culture in Anglo-America is overwhelmingly right wing”... more »
Man of many dreams. In the early 1930s, the physicist Wolfgang Pauli began recording his dreams for Carl Jung. Somehow he remembered 1,300 of them ... more »
Rose Dugdale was a 33-year-old British heiress with a Ph.D. and a glowing recommendation from Iris Murdoch. How did she end up an art thief? ... more »
An “economy of favors.” Poetry prizes suffer from reciprocity: judges give awards to those who have given them awards... more »
Suffering from syphilis, Manet turned to alternative medicine: ergot of rye, mercury, ice showers, hydroelectric baths. Nothing helped... more »
The old-world strangeness of her diction, the stirringly beautiful chest voice: What it means to finally take Dolly Parton seriously... more »
Amid extreme deprivation, food and shelter matter, of course. But so do laughter, stories, play, dance, music... more »
Once a patrician malady, gout is now more widespread. Fortunately, treatments have advanced beyond poultices of fermented ox dung ... more »
Literature is distinct from politics. And yet, from Walt Whitman to Curtis Sittenfeld, American writers can’t look away... more »
America is on the brink of civilization collapse, argues Peter Turchin. The cause: an overproduction of elites... more »
Classical music offers the last true unmediated listening experience: no microphones, no amplifiers, no speakers ... more »
Book publishing is a business, and a difficult one. One result of our hard times: a well-made book is tougher to find ... more »
At The New York Times, liberal institutionalists and woke insurrectionists duke it out. Is the paper of the resistance still the paper of record? ... more »
The study of civilizational collapse was once a preoccupation of marginal scholars. Now it's growing ... more »
With wit and an aversion to self-help, Kate Baer is the Instagram poet for people who don’t like Instagram poets ... more »
Writing with a pen used to be a leaky, smudgy, frustrating affair. That all changed on October 29, 1945 ... more »
After Oxford, the geneticist J.B.S. Haldane headed to the World War I trenches. He found happiness... more »
Hegel criticized the Romantics for placing individualism above institutions, producing rebellion and disharmony. What would he make of us?... more »
Why was a retrospective of Philip Guston’s paintings put on hold? The powers that be couldn’t distinguish between racist imagery and images depicting racists ... more »
After decades of political repression, Kenya is trying to shed its reputation as a literary desert. The global publishing industry isn’t helping ... more »
The film industry is beleaguered, but the experience of watching a movie on a big screen, as part of an audience, will not disappear ... more »
When humanities professors wade into legal debates, things go south quickly. Consider, for instance, their argument that “originalism is dumb”... more »
The slow agonies of respiratory disease, like the swift drama of plague, can inspire great art... more »
Is strongman a useful category for political analysis? A new book stretches the definition beyond its limits... more »
Philip Roth, Jewish patron saint of rage and writing, never forgave ex-wives, nosy neighbors, or scathing critics. His thin skin grew thinner over the years... more »
When people struggle to read a classic like the Iliad, it’s not because of a moral aversion. It’s because they’re bored and confused ... more »
What’s behind the highbrow hostility to works of self-help? It’s the status anxiety of professional critics, argues a new book... more »
Beneath Thorstein Veblen’s austere exterior and grim scowl lurked a dimly perceptible reservoir of hope ... more »
Michel Gallimard and Albert Camus were killed in a car crash in 1960. Gallimard was driving fast, but was foul play the true cause? ... more »
Graham Greene's restlessness — a new country, a new woman — shaped his work and wrecked his life ... more »
What's right about rights and wrong with virtues? Rights don't depend on those who suppose themselves to be virtuous ... more »
Kate Manne’s consideration of misogyny is full of mockery, condemnation, and fatalism. We deserve better from our public intellectuals ... more »
Michael Sandel’s critique of meritocracy misses something obvious: Merit and credentials are not synonymous ... more »
It was a neoclassical homage, “empire style,” “gauzy nudity.” In the late 18th century, a clinging white bedgown was the height of fashion ... more »
Like a nightmarish accordion, Kafka’s “lost” writings expand, trapping readers in their complexities. They make no easy task for the critic... more »
Thorstein Veblen seemed intent on torching every school of thought. Does the academy still produce such thinkers? ... more »
The Ferrante Letters, a supposedly experimental critical project, ventures little beyond textual analysis. Quelle horreur!... more »
“Fail fast,” “fail better” — we celebrate failure as something inevitable on the path to success. That’s nonsense ... more »
Down with occurrences! Our politics, wars, triumphs, and failures are mere “surface disturbances” and “crests of foam” on the great sea of history ... more »
The question of how to live has long flummoxed great minds. But not cats: They have nothing to learn from philosophy... more »
The clock, the astrolabe, the university — the so-called “Dark Ages” produced some of our most important tools and concepts. It’s time to revisit the period... more »
The Didion gaze. What makes her work fascinating is also what makes it rare: a woman looking at men and not looking away ... more »
Why did the West rise? Meritocracy, democracy, trust, innovation, and restraint, argues a new book. But was it really so simple?... more »
From the “morally hideous” to the terroristically violent, Kate Manne offers a clear taxonomy of misogyny. And yet no vision for the future emerges ... more »
What constituted identity in the Renaissance? According to two new books, it was a slippery concept, bounded by neither mind nor body... more »
Selecting Adrienne Rich for a poetry prize, Auden praised her “neatly and modestly” finished work. So began her desire to be “messily passionate and grand” ... more »
Even when the history of philosophy doesn't make sense philosophically, it does makes sense as a story ... more »
War has advanced in lockstep with civilization, argues Margaret MacMillan. It is "the most organized of all human activities” ... more »
A rage to possess: Degas could not say no to calico headdresses, Normandy handkerchiefs, Gavarni prints, and Oriental carpets ... more »
What's the best book of 2020? The New Statesman rounds up picks from Hilary Mantel, Steven Pinker, Pankaj Mishra, and other readers ... more »
In a new book of essays, Zadie Smith offers advice for getting through the pandemic: “Think, reflexively, of whoever suffers” ... more »
“This is the difficult miracle of Black poetry in America: that we persist, published or not, and loved or unloved. We persist.” ... more »
When Michael Dirda first heard Wagner, he understood why Victorian mothers shielded their daughters from it. "This wasn’t just a 40-minute duet, it was aural sex" ... more »
It's been said that "humans’ greatest invention was the invention of invention itself." What are the origins of our ingenuity? ... more »
Sybille Bedford ran in elite literary circles with Peggy Guggenheim and Cyril Connolly. She kept her friends close — and exploited them mercilessly ... more »
It’s easy to hate Ezra Pound for his racism and fascism. But consider his painful postwar years and another emotion may emerge: pity ... more »
The growth of specialization is by no means regrettable. Pathological pedantry is a prerequisite for producing knowledge ... more »
Historians have lost influence to economists and political scientists. Is that because the latter are more willing to court the powerful? ... more »
Was Ted Hughes a wife-beater? That may depend on your interpretation of Sylvia Plath’s tale of a glass thrown across a dark room ... more »
Gogol was strange, but consider his parents: His father was a sort of court jester; his mother thought her son invented the steamboat and the railroad... more »
Delve into Nabokov’s letters and lectures, and a familiar, impertinent question will occur: Was he a pervert? ... more »
Across five volumes totaling 2,500 pages, Joseph Frank did more than any other critic to illuminate the mind of Dostoevsky... more »
J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis sought to transform the world by reintroducing old stories. Nearly a century later, they’ve been remarkably successful ... more »
Before the Gilded Age, classical music was on par with juggling acts and vaudeville tunes. Beer — not wine — flowed. What changed?... more »
Consider pinnacles of literary culture: Elizabethan England, 19th-century Russia, Flaubert’s France. America, in 2020, is at the other end of that spectrum ... more »
For the academic left, science is a hegemonic force with sweeping authority over the modern world. But that misunderstands science ... more »
Now bludgeoned by liberals, the idea of American exceptionalism was itself a creation of the left ... more »
What does the pandemic portend for the arts in America? We can’t even agree that culture matters, much less how to protect it ... more »
People who grouse about cultural appropriation aren't just puritanical; they don't respect the anarchic energies of art... more »
Modern poetry is intimidating. But you don’t need expertise in ekphrasis to appreciate Ross Gay, Frank Bidart, and Ada Limón ... more »
Era of cant. Wherever people are punished for expressing an unorthodox opinion, humbug is bound to flourish ... more »
The art of artificial intelligence. Are we at the dawn of a new medium? If so, it would portend a doleful future ... more »
Gone are the days of voracious nerding out in the academy. Such work must now demonstrate a new moral piety ... more »
“The difficulty of making out the plain sense of poetry.” Literary studies faces a foundational problem: Making distinctions comes with diminishing returns... more »
Montaigne studied classical philosophy but claimed to learn nothing from it — the only moral authority he recognized was his own ... more »
America is a government of words, our language shaping our politics. Which is why we need critics like David Bromwich ... more »
"The artist is of no importance. Only what he creates is important,” said William Faulkner, as if he knew his personal failings would diminish his professional reputation ... more »
Genius is, among other things, a personality-laundering scheme. Boorish behavior is reclassified as charming idiosyncrasy. Agnes Callard explains ... more »
Henry Adams, American aristocrat. His friends adored him, but his “distilled and vitriolic mockery” was an acquired taste ... more »
The right-wing Medievalist Ernst Kantorowicz once killed Communists. Later, at Berkeley, he refused to sign a Cold War loyalty oath. Why?... more »
Freud’s philosophy of grief. How the loss of a daughter shaped a father’s understanding of death ... more »
Harold Bloom’s last book is lazy, solipsistic, vague, and plain wrong. It suggests that he may have misunderstood literature all along... more »
Feynman, Hawking, and Herschel all insist that empirical evidence is the sole truth of science. Do they protest too much? ... more »
America’s battle is not between a “liberal” left and a “fascist” right, but rather between the people and a grandiose system of political management ... more »
Literature defines itself against the pedantry of popular advice. Self-help promotes itself as an antidote to intellectual bombast. Are the genres antithetical? ... more »
“The world is a wild and unlikely place: the giraffe, stranger than the griffin, taller than a tall house, does us the incomparable gift of being proof of it” ... more »
A profusion of new voices, all clamoring for readership, most unable to pay the bills: the 18th-century writing life... more »
Though his ideas have faded, the charismatic philosopher Franz Brentano achieved immortality by other means — his students ... more »
Before there was cancel culture, Wagner was canceled. He hated Jews and was embraced by the Nazis. Yet his work has persisted ... more »
A new translation casts Beowulf as a modern bro, making a point about toxic masculinity and leaving a trail of clichés ... more »
Self-awareness as a literary tic doesn’t arise out of thin air. So why have writers become so annoyingly self-conscious? ... more »
In praise of minor aesthetics. The beautiful and sublime are rare; the cute, zany, interesting, and gimmicky are ubiquitous ... more »
The election is over, but anti-intellectual resentment remains strong. What does that mean for the academy? ... more »
Ours is an intellectually enfeebled milieu in which the self-interest of privileged white men is passed off as “global thinking”... more »
Don DeLillo and Martin Amis ruled the literary ’80s. Now they poke along, referencing their former genius ... more »
The “first-person industrial complex.” Confessional writing — from Augustine to Jia Tolentino — turns desire into discourse. But why is it so dominant now?... more »
What happens when we pray? An anthropologist embeds with an evangelical church to distinguish the metaphorical from the miraculous ... more »
In praise of politics. It’s messy, unpredictable, and often disappointing. It’s also the starting point for meaningful societal change ... more »
The “full-naming” crusade — against referring to some composers only by last name (Beethoven) but to others by full name — is just silly ... more »
Amis, Barnes, Rushdie, McEwan — the British baby boomers sink toward senescence with a wave of nostalgic, self-indulgent prose... more »
The Theory Wars of the '90s never ended; they just migrated from Diacritics to Twitter. There’s no end in sight ... more »
Being an editor requires two qualities that rarely coexist in the same person, says Norman Podhoretz: arrogance and selflessness ... more »
Why is autofiction so white? Perhaps it’s an inevitable result of a literary landscape dominated by white editors and critics ... more »
Does history really “have its eyes on us,” as Lin-Manuel Miranda’s George Washington says? Where did this idea come from, anyway? ... more »
Hannah Arendt is the most used and abused philosophical source to interpret American politics. Sam Moyn explains ... more »
"The mob is drunk on the new power that surveillance provides them, seemingly unaware of the many ways it could come back to bite them next" ... more »
Political poems were “excruciating”; the “so-called arts of the left” were insincere — for George and Mary Oppen, politics and the arts did not mix ... more »
Ruthlessly self-absorbed, obsessed with power, a sexual predator — Simone de Beauvoir was not a good person. But at least she stood for something ... more »
What makes Chekhov unique? His perception, his ability to discern the subtlest emotional shades of human experience. Gary Saul Morson explains ... more »
"A grabby talky disorderly inferno of the spirit." William Gaddis's J R was almost comically ahead of its time ... more »
What do we mean when we say a piece of art is "relevant"? The characterization says less about the work than about the audience... more »
The talents of the painter and poet Max Jacob were legion. Their fullest expression may have come in an overcrowded prison cell for Jews in Orléans in 1944 ... more »
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