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Monday December 14, 2020
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Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »
Dec. 14, 2020

Articles of Note

Why were doctors and nurses uniquely attracted to Nazi philosophy, enlisting in much higher proportions than any other profession? ... more »


New Books

Is strongman a useful category for political analysis? A new book stretches the definition beyond its limits... more »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


Dec. 12, 2020

Articles of Note

Just 11 percent of books published by large presses in 2018 were written by people of color. Why is publishing so white?... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

Before the Gilded Age, classical music was on par with juggling acts and vaudeville tunes. Beer — not wine — flowed. What changed?... more »


Dec. 11, 2020

Articles of Note

For Barbara Guest, writing poetry meant no planning — just waiting for a poem to compose itself spontaneously... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


Dec. 10, 2020

Articles of Note

“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 »


New Books

What’s behind the highbrow hostility to works of self-help? It’s the status anxiety of professional critics, argues a new book... more »


Essays & Opinions

For the academic left, science is a hegemonic force with sweeping authority over the modern world. But that misunderstands science   ... more »


Dec. 9, 2020

Articles of Note

Was Orwell's reputation protected by his early death? He avoided several controversies that would have altered how we see him ... more »


New Books

Beneath Thorstein Veblen’s austere exterior and grim scowl lurked a dimly perceptible reservoir of hope  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Now bludgeoned by liberals, the idea of American exceptionalism was itself a creation of the left  ... more »


Dec. 8, 2020

Articles of Note

The tortured letters of T.S. Eliot and Emily Hale. He was a married man writing incessantly and “tampering insidiously” with her mind   ... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


Dec. 7, 2020

Articles of Note

What is cancel culture? Does it even exist? Ligaya Mishan has the long and tortured history  ... more »


New Books

Graham Greene's restlessness — a new country, a new woman — shaped his work and wrecked his life  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

People who grouse about cultural appropriation aren't just puritanical; they don't respect the anarchic energies of art... more »


Dec. 5, 2020

Articles of Note

How did Citizen Kane become the greatest movie of all? Blame the French film critics who first recognized it as a masterpiece ... more »


New Books

What's right about rights and wrong with virtues? Rights don't depend on those who suppose themselves to be virtuous ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Modern poetry is intimidating. But you don’t need expertise in ekphrasis to appreciate Ross Gay, Frank Bidart, and Ada Limón ... more »


Dec. 4, 2020

Articles of Note

How did Kurt, feckless Ivy frat boy, became Vonnegut, satirist to the galaxy? His early love letters offer clues  ... more »


New Books

Kate Manne’s consideration of misogyny is full of mockery, condemnation, and fatalism. We deserve better from our public intellectuals ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Era of cant. Wherever people are punished for expressing an unorthodox opinion, humbug is bound to flourish  ... more »


Dec. 3, 2020

Articles of Note

For the philosopher Alphonso Lingis, goodness and exultation are central to our sense of self. “How good it is to be alive!”  ... more »


New Books

Michael Sandel’s critique of meritocracy misses something obvious: Merit and credentials are not synonymous  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

The art of artificial intelligence. Are we at the dawn of a new medium? If so, it would portend a doleful future  ... more »


Dec. 2, 2020

Articles of Note

How did Roger Penrose pioneer a renaissance of gravity theory? He had the wisdom to ignore academic fashion  ... more »


New Books

It was a neoclassical homage, “empire style,” “gauzy nudity.” In the late 18th century, a clinging white bedgown was the height of fashion ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Gone are the days of voracious nerding out in the academy. Such work must now demonstrate a new moral piety  ... more »


Dec. 1, 2020

Articles of Note

Corresponding with her future husband earned Adrienne Rich a rebuke from her father. Trading one man for another was hardly emancipation... more »


New Books

Like a nightmarish accordion, Kafka’s “lost” writings expand, trapping readers in their complexities. They make no easy task for the critic... more »


Essays & Opinions

“The difficulty of making out the plain sense of poetry.” Literary studies faces a foundational problem: Making distinctions comes with diminishing returns... more »


Nov. 30, 2020

Articles of Note

How has America changed Yiddish? Simple: It’s killed it. How has Yiddish changed America? That’s more complicated  ... more »


New Books

Thorstein Veblen seemed intent on torching every school of thought. Does the academy still produce such thinkers?  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Montaigne studied classical philosophy but claimed to learn nothing from it — the only moral authority he recognized was his own  ... more »


Nov. 28, 2020

Articles of Note

William S. Burroughs didn't care much for music. Yet for a generation of musicians, he was a singular influence  ... more »


New Books

The Ferrante Letters, a supposedly experimental critical project, ventures little beyond textual analysis. Quelle horreur!... more »


Essays & Opinions

America is a government of words, our language shaping our politics. Which is why we need critics like David Bromwich  ... more »


Nov. 27, 2020

Articles of Note

Can a machine think like a physicist? That’s the promise of artificial intelligence and quantum computing. Is it realistic?   ... more »


New Books

“Fail fast,” “fail better” — we celebrate failure as something inevitable on the path to success. That’s nonsense   ... more »


Essays & Opinions

"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 »


Nov. 26, 2020

Articles of Note

Frida in France. The accommodations were unsatisfactory; the politics, lamentable; the intellectuals, boring. But there was a silver lining... more »


New Books

Down with occurrences! Our politics, wars, triumphs, and failures are mere “surface disturbances” and “crests of foam” on the great sea of history  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Genius is, among other things, a personality-laundering scheme. Boorish behavior is reclassified as charming idiosyncrasy. Agnes Callard explains ... more »


Nov. 25, 2020

Articles of Note

The science of personal space. Lessons from zebras, porcupines, and people show how close is too close for comfort ... more »


New Books

The question of how to live has long flummoxed great minds. But not cats: They have nothing to learn from philosophy... more »


Essays & Opinions

Henry Adams, American aristocrat. His friends adored him, but his “distilled and vitriolic mockery” was an acquired taste  ... more »


Nov. 24, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

The right-wing Medievalist Ernst Kantorowicz once killed Communists. Later, at Berkeley, he refused to sign a Cold War loyalty oath. Why?... more »


Nov. 23, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

The Didion gaze. What makes her work fascinating is also what makes it rare: a woman looking at men and not looking away  ... more »


Essays & Opinions

Freud’s philosophy of grief. How the loss of a daughter shaped a father’s understanding of death ... more »


Nov. 21, 2020

Articles of Note

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 »


New Books

Why did the West rise? Meritocracy, democracy, trust, innovation, and restraint, argues a new book. But was it really so simple?... more »


Essays & Opinions

Harold Bloom’s last book is lazy, solipsistic, vague, and plain wrong. It suggests that he may have misunderstood literature all along... more »


Nov. 20, 2020

Articles of Note

An “economy of favors.” Poetry prizes suffer from reciprocity: judges give awards to those who have given them awards... more »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

Feynman, Hawking, and Herschel all insist that empirical evidence is the sole truth of science. Do they protest too much?   ... more »




Articles of Note

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 »


Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »

“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 »


New Books

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 »


Essays & Opinions

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 »


Nota Bene

  • John le Carré, R.I.P.
  • Ice business
  • Remembering Jan Morris
  • No bad sex award
  • N.Y.'s mob mythology
  • On legal judgment
  • Roald Dahl's anti-Semitism
  • Has publishing gone woke?
  • Derrida's bio
  • Cancelling Philip Johnson?


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