Thanks to a recent antitrust trial, we have a clear look at the business of books. What it reveals isn’t pretty... more »
Readers crave inspirational stories of women through history becoming kickass revolutionaries. That narrative flattens the Bluestockings... more »
“If poetry is worth anything, it is worth getting mad about.” A.O. Scott on the late Helen Vendler... more »
Penelope Fitzgerald, long expected to produce works of genius, only began writing serious fiction at the age of 62. How come?... more »
Imagine a robot’s version of the history of the world: machinic developments, heroic software engineers, new chip architecture... more »
As you navigate the cul-de-sacs of modern coupledom, Laura Kipnis has some advice: Don’t divorce a memoirist... more »
“A death by bureaucracy.” Why is the University of Oxford shuttering its Future of Humanity Institute?... more »
Dwight Garner on Joseph Epstein: “His sentences read as if they were written by a sentient tasseled loafer and edited by a sentient bow tie”... more »
In 1953, Margaret Macdonald advanced a bold theory: “Philosophical theories are much more like good stories than scientific explanations”... more »
When did it become embarrassing to like classical music? When it became thought of as an elite art... more »
A tidy lawn, a model home, good local schools — suburbia lured Americans by the millions. But it was a trap... more »
Animals mock efforts to classify and master them. Our formidable opponents include coral, rattlesnakes, stingrays, and raccoons... more »
Leonard Cohen was in a dark place: He hated poetry, and folk music, the hippie scene. Then the Yom Kippur War broke out... more »
“Nostalgia” was coined in 1688 to denote a painful, even deadly form of homesickness. It still has a bad reputation... more »
Descartes’s stove. Comfort is key to thought, and so the maxim “I think, therefore I am,” may be rewritten: “I think in a stove-heated room, therefore I am”... more »
A homogeneous Harlem Renaissance? The period’s art depicts pool halls, jazz clubs, formal dinners, and social groups at odds with one another... more »
A provocation: What if our world is not enlightened at all, but a product of the Enlightenment’s failure?... more »
“I was born for opposition.” Lord Byron’s scandalous affairs and flouting of convention led to his becoming a social outcast... more »
We read the classics but ignore much of what readers once enjoyed: forgeries, pseudotranslations, and other ephemera from the dustbin of literary history... more »
For the philosopher Byung-Chul Han, relentless posting and liking on social media are evidence of the vacuity of modern life... more »
“Culture is no longer a way of transcending the political but the language in which certain key political demands are framed and fought out”... more »
“The Recluse of Amherst.” Emily Dickinson’s life, it turns out, was full of baking, corresponding, and humor... more »
Hypochondria is a learning disease. The more we understand about the ways our bodies can fail, the more we have to fear... more »
How do artists begin? By making sketches and lines in notebooks, by waiting, by gathering fragments, and by finding hope... more »
Making art in the streaming era: Wall Street cash buoyed the era of “prestige TV,” but then that money dried up... more »
AI robots can help us explore Mars, perform surgeries, and deliver aid to disaster zones. So is our robot-assisted future bright?... more »
In praise of walking. “At three miles an hour, the world is a continuum. … There are no beginnings or endings, only continuity”... more »
Is Glenn Loury’s new memoir a brave act of self-reckoning or a reckless act of self-sabotage?... more »
Between the emergence of humans and the invention of writing is blank space. To fill it, we have a half-cocked concept: prehistory... more »
“There’s an invigorating novelty in seeing a master try something new without immediately becoming virtuosic”... more »
“That is right,” Joseph Priestley said when he completed editing the manuscript. “I have now done.” Minutes later, he was dead... more »
A decade before the Sokal hoax, critical theory was lampooned in a German essay: “Lacancan und Derridada”... more »
Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities, a compelling account of nationalism’s origins, speaks little to its contemporary re-emergence... more »
“I will dedicate all my work to her, forever.” The novelist Carson McCullers had a habit of overdoing her romantic pronouncements... more »
Norman Podhoretz's masculinity problem — and ours. Why were the New York Intellectuals so preoccupied with manliness? ... more »
Most newspaper columnists sink into a comfortable bath of hackery. Others have a fountain of ideas, but all of their ideas are bad... more »
George Orwell was an altogether weirder person, and 1984 a weirder novel, than we’ve appreciated... more »
“[Lauren] Oyler clearly wishes to be a person who says brilliant things ... but she lacks the curiosity that would permit her to do so”... more »
The new academic politics are not a recipe for disciplinary longevity, let alone for saving the planet... more »
How do artists think? Where do they begin? How do they know when they’re done? Adam Moss looks for answers... more »
Exhortations to “sit up straight!” ring from Goop to TikTok to hatha yoga to the far reaches of YouTube. Why so much posture panic?... more »
What was the intellectual dark web? A worthy project gone bad or a fraud based on spurious grievances?... more »
In the winter of 1959, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton audited a course given by Robert Lowell. They were forever changed as poets... more »
Sheila Heti has been editing and reworking her 500,000 word diary for a decade. The result is a kind of Symbolist poetry... more »
Beethoven’s secret code. Do handwritten scribbles in his manuscripts reveal elaborate musical directions lost for centuries?... more »
“It was easy for people to just remember and regurgitate ‘r > g.’” Thomas Piketty reflects on his best seller a decade after its publication... more »
Imagine that social critics were to excise cynicism from their social criticism. Peter Gordon makes the case... more »
Second chances teach us that repetition is not mechanistic or meaningless — and that we can be the authors, not merely the victims, of our lives... more »
John Barth, who believed the old conventions of literary expression were “used up,” is dead. He was 93... more »
Stories about the end of the world are as old as stories themselves. We are obsessed with our own demise... more »
What is space for? Yes, adventure, exploration, exploitation. But maybe space is really just for space... more »
Contemporary writing on liberalism consists of two types: autopsies and demonologies... more »
The contradictions of Ian Fleming: loving yet cruel, arrogant yet insecure, spiteful yet generous... more »
We think of Robert Frost as the good, gray poet of the New England woods. His work was darker — and more demonic — than that... more »
Long a widely shared ideal, “equality” is now seen as promoting a specious universalism. A new virtue has replaced it: “equity”... more »
Crossword puzzles work because words are drenched in meanings, shapes, and sounds. Becca Rothfeld explains... more »
“I am after small truths, not after truth with a capital T.” Daniel Kahneman in perhaps his final interview ... more »
Jamaicans are ready to embrace Tacky’s Revolt, an uprising of enslaved Africans on the island in 1760. For a pioneering historian, that’s complicated... more »
Classics in crisis. What the field needs is a sweeping history of Roman emperors and their influence beyond Europe... more »
"No matter how many books, articles, Tweets, and TikToks I’d gobbled up, it had apparently eluded me that no one was ever going to say I’d produced enough"... more »
H.P. Lovecraft, philosopher. His fiction blended materialism, determinism, and atheism into a new school of thought: “cosmic indifferentism”... more »
Contemporary Stoicism is all aphorism and motivational cliche. It is toothless — practically to the point of meaninglessness... more »
Radicalism is a complex and sometimes paradoxical posture, one that Raymond Williams wrestled with his entire life... more »
Thanks to a recent antitrust trial, we have a clear look at the business of books. What it reveals isn’t pretty... more »
Penelope Fitzgerald, long expected to produce works of genius, only began writing serious fiction at the age of 62. How come?... more »
“A death by bureaucracy.” Why is the University of Oxford shuttering its Future of Humanity Institute?... more »
When did it become embarrassing to like classical music? When it became thought of as an elite art... more »
Leonard Cohen was in a dark place: He hated poetry, and folk music, the hippie scene. Then the Yom Kippur War broke out... more »
A homogeneous Harlem Renaissance? The period’s art depicts pool halls, jazz clubs, formal dinners, and social groups at odds with one another... more »
We read the classics but ignore much of what readers once enjoyed: forgeries, pseudotranslations, and other ephemera from the dustbin of literary history... more »
“The Recluse of Amherst.” Emily Dickinson’s life, it turns out, was full of baking, corresponding, and humor... more »
Making art in the streaming era: Wall Street cash buoyed the era of “prestige TV,” but then that money dried up... more »
Is Glenn Loury’s new memoir a brave act of self-reckoning or a reckless act of self-sabotage?... more »
“That is right,” Joseph Priestley said when he completed editing the manuscript. “I have now done.” Minutes later, he was dead... more »
“I will dedicate all my work to her, forever.” The novelist Carson McCullers had a habit of overdoing her romantic pronouncements... more »
George Orwell was an altogether weirder person, and 1984 a weirder novel, than we’ve appreciated... more »
How do artists think? Where do they begin? How do they know when they’re done? Adam Moss looks for answers... more »
In the winter of 1959, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton audited a course given by Robert Lowell. They were forever changed as poets... more »
“It was easy for people to just remember and regurgitate ‘r > g.’” Thomas Piketty reflects on his best seller a decade after its publication... more »
John Barth, who believed the old conventions of literary expression were “used up,” is dead. He was 93... more »
Contemporary writing on liberalism consists of two types: autopsies and demonologies... more »
Long a widely shared ideal, “equality” is now seen as promoting a specious universalism. A new virtue has replaced it: “equity”... more »
Jamaicans are ready to embrace Tacky’s Revolt, an uprising of enslaved Africans on the island in 1760. For a pioneering historian, that’s complicated... more »
H.P. Lovecraft, philosopher. His fiction blended materialism, determinism, and atheism into a new school of thought: “cosmic indifferentism”... more »
Daniel Kahneman, who marveled at “endlessly complicated” human psychology, is dead. He was 90... NYT... Daniel Engber... more »
Caravaggio’s final crimes: carrying a sword without a permit, smearing excrement on a house, smashing a plate of artichokes in the face of a waiter... more »
Joseph Epstein, with scores to settle, wrote a memoir. Why was he fired as editor of The American Scholar?... more »
The physical world is full of inefficiencies. Cue the “digital twin,” where they can be ironed out virtually then reflected back into reality... more »
Marilynne Robinson: “I consider the Bible to be the most complex document on the planet”... more »
Does “coming out of the closet” turn gay men into oppressors of the more marginalized? Queer theory seems to think so... more »
The publishing industry is notoriously sleepy. But here come the Silicon-Valley inflected CEOs spouting MBAisms... more »
Whither the “litblog”? Blogs were once at the center of the online cultural ecosystem. The appetite for such work has diminished... more »
Wicked baronets and disastrous marriages — the “sensation novels” of the 1860s updated Gothic elements for Victorian sensibilities... more »
In 2020, a star physicist claimed an incredible advance: a room temperature superconductor. Retractions followed... more »
Wonders emerge in the ocean’s deepest trenches: corals, crustaceans, a multitude of bizarre fish. Also: nuclear waste and tins of Spam... more »
What can a generation of deeply religious thinkers in a moment of disenchantment teach modern humanists? Everything... more »
Nietzsche’s misogyny. Yes, he railed against intelligent women, said Helene Stöcker, but anyone could see he meant it ironically... more »
For decades, rumors circulated about Charles Bukowski’s pro-Nazi letters. Now discovered, they reveal a surprise: Bukowski was joking... more »
In 1819, Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, a philologist and theologian, was jailed. His crime: teaching gymnastics and calisthenics... more »
Gabriel García Márquez wanted his final novel destroyed. Now, a decade after his death, it will be published... more »
Unesco has tasked itself with safeguarding “intangible cultural heritage.” Does Belgian horseback shrimp fishing need protection?... more »
When philosophers had sharp elbows, idiocy was mercilessly mocked. Now the field is kindler, gentler, and awash in silliness... more »
Miles Davis’s Take 3 was nine minutes and thirty-five seconds of musical transcendence. His impromptu solo has gained immortality... more »
Readers crave inspirational stories of women through history becoming kickass revolutionaries. That narrative flattens the Bluestockings... more »
Imagine a robot’s version of the history of the world: machinic developments, heroic software engineers, new chip architecture... more »
Dwight Garner on Joseph Epstein: “His sentences read as if they were written by a sentient tasseled loafer and edited by a sentient bow tie”... more »
A tidy lawn, a model home, good local schools — suburbia lured Americans by the millions. But it was a trap... more »
“Nostalgia” was coined in 1688 to denote a painful, even deadly form of homesickness. It still has a bad reputation... more »
A provocation: What if our world is not enlightened at all, but a product of the Enlightenment’s failure?... more »
For the philosopher Byung-Chul Han, relentless posting and liking on social media are evidence of the vacuity of modern life... more »
Hypochondria is a learning disease. The more we understand about the ways our bodies can fail, the more we have to fear... more »
AI robots can help us explore Mars, perform surgeries, and deliver aid to disaster zones. So is our robot-assisted future bright?... more »
Between the emergence of humans and the invention of writing is blank space. To fill it, we have a half-cocked concept: prehistory... more »
A decade before the Sokal hoax, critical theory was lampooned in a German essay: “Lacancan und Derridada”... more »
Norman Podhoretz's masculinity problem — and ours. Why were the New York Intellectuals so preoccupied with manliness? ... more »
“[Lauren] Oyler clearly wishes to be a person who says brilliant things ... but she lacks the curiosity that would permit her to do so”... more »
Exhortations to “sit up straight!” ring from Goop to TikTok to hatha yoga to the far reaches of YouTube. Why so much posture panic?... more »
Sheila Heti has been editing and reworking her 500,000 word diary for a decade. The result is a kind of Symbolist poetry... more »
Imagine that social critics were to excise cynicism from their social criticism. Peter Gordon makes the case... more »
Stories about the end of the world are as old as stories themselves. We are obsessed with our own demise... more »
The contradictions of Ian Fleming: loving yet cruel, arrogant yet insecure, spiteful yet generous... more »
Crossword puzzles work because words are drenched in meanings, shapes, and sounds. Becca Rothfeld explains... more »
Classics in crisis. What the field needs is a sweeping history of Roman emperors and their influence beyond Europe... more »
Contemporary Stoicism is all aphorism and motivational cliche. It is toothless — practically to the point of meaninglessness... more »
By the 19th century, educated elites had little time for ghosts, demons, and other apparitions. The Society for Psychical Research, on the other hand... more »
For women among the New York Intellectuals, men wanted to sleep with you or write like you. Or both... more »
“Can God create a stone so heavy that He cannot lift it?” Paradoxes sound absurd, but they can be logically sustained... more »
Jesus, and other magi. Early variants of Christianity championed Pontius Pilate, Apollonius, and a holy snake... more »
Cities have become frictionless, optimized sites of consumerism and productivity. In other words, they have lost their humanity... more »
In 1959, Sonny Rollins vanished. No performing and no recording for two years. Turns out he kept a diary... more »
Shakespeare’s “sisters.” Women writers in the Renaissance were constrained by disinheritance, marital disputes, legal troubles, and humiliation... more »
Lauren Oyler’s essays “contain not arguments or judgments so much as advertisements for a conspicuously edgy personality”... more »
The feminist history of the crossword puzzle. Some of the form’s early champions were women working for little to no pay... more »
Bernard Malamud sounded nothing like Philip Roth and Saul Bellow. His stories are no less essential... more »
Medieval England had amulets for everything: to preserve health, to protect grain from vermin, to help children understand crows... more »
If Keith Haring’s most enduring legacy is the blurring of lines between art and commerce, does that make him a sellout?... more »
“It’s not that one poet is more ‘political’ than another,” said Seamus Heaney. “It’s that some make the … artistic mistake of espousing ‘politics’ in the verse”... more »
“There exist few more sober, reliable, or serious guides to thinking about the virtues and vices of liberalism than Raymond Aron”... more »
Late capitalism and its discontents. Why do lit scholars have an undying attachment to an epoch that ended decades ago?... more »
Who’s afraid of gender? asks Judith Butler, in a book oddly focused on Ukraine, police violence, neoliberalism, and every other leftist concern... more »
Should literature “rescue” the law with novelty, interpretive flexibility, and an appreciation for paradox? No... more »
Canadians often contrast their secularism with the religiosity of Americans. A century ago, the roles were reversed... more »
“If poetry is worth anything, it is worth getting mad about.” A.O. Scott on the late Helen Vendler... more »
As you navigate the cul-de-sacs of modern coupledom, Laura Kipnis has some advice: Don’t divorce a memoirist... more »
In 1953, Margaret Macdonald advanced a bold theory: “Philosophical theories are much more like good stories than scientific explanations”... more »
Animals mock efforts to classify and master them. Our formidable opponents include coral, rattlesnakes, stingrays, and raccoons... more »
Descartes’s stove. Comfort is key to thought, and so the maxim “I think, therefore I am,” may be rewritten: “I think in a stove-heated room, therefore I am”... more »
“I was born for opposition.” Lord Byron’s scandalous affairs and flouting of convention led to his becoming a social outcast... more »
“Culture is no longer a way of transcending the political but the language in which certain key political demands are framed and fought out”... more »
How do artists begin? By making sketches and lines in notebooks, by waiting, by gathering fragments, and by finding hope... more »
In praise of walking. “At three miles an hour, the world is a continuum. … There are no beginnings or endings, only continuity”... more »
“There’s an invigorating novelty in seeing a master try something new without immediately becoming virtuosic”... more »
Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities, a compelling account of nationalism’s origins, speaks little to its contemporary re-emergence... more »
Most newspaper columnists sink into a comfortable bath of hackery. Others have a fountain of ideas, but all of their ideas are bad... more »
The new academic politics are not a recipe for disciplinary longevity, let alone for saving the planet... more »
What was the intellectual dark web? A worthy project gone bad or a fraud based on spurious grievances?... more »
Beethoven’s secret code. Do handwritten scribbles in his manuscripts reveal elaborate musical directions lost for centuries?... more »
Second chances teach us that repetition is not mechanistic or meaningless — and that we can be the authors, not merely the victims, of our lives... more »
What is space for? Yes, adventure, exploration, exploitation. But maybe space is really just for space... more »
We think of Robert Frost as the good, gray poet of the New England woods. His work was darker — and more demonic — than that... more »
“I am after small truths, not after truth with a capital T.” Daniel Kahneman in perhaps his final interview ... more »
"No matter how many books, articles, Tweets, and TikToks I’d gobbled up, it had apparently eluded me that no one was ever going to say I’d produced enough"... more »
Radicalism is a complex and sometimes paradoxical posture, one that Raymond Williams wrestled with his entire life... more »
As an editor, Toni Morrison wrote hundreds of rejection letters – long, generous, critical, and freshly unearthed from the archive... more »
Gender’s enemies. Judith Butler targets conservative Christians, white supremacists, and trans-exclusionary radical feminists... more »
Reading Shakespeare in its original English can be hard going at first. But his example will always show us what is possible... more »
“We live in an unheroic and disillusioned moment, and—as to sales—a moment when ambitious novels have become a niche taste”... more »
The Monster of Ravenna, the Monk Calf, and, of course, the Pope Ass. Why were 16th-century luminaries printing pamphlets on monsters?... more »
“Those of us who consume and participate in culture today… are all, at some level, hypocrites, complicit in the fortification of our own aesthetic prison”... more »
Ishiguro drafted The Remains of the Day in four weeks. It took Min Jin Lee 28 years to write Pachinko. But slow writing has its virtues... more »
"The university campus is rapidly becoming a locus of infantilizing social control that any independent-minded student should seek to escape" ... more »
Dante was shaped by two deep longings – for Beatrice and for the city of Florence – that together fueled his poetry... more »
Economics is in disarray, says Angus Deaton. Part of the problem is an overenthusiastic belief in the efficacy of markets... more »
The reputation of the historical novel is ascendant but perplexing. Is the appeal primarily pedagogical, moral, or escapist?... more »
“Make love not babies.” Once a fringe philosophy, antinatalism can now be found on highway billboards... more »
Journalists were once skeptical of big words and complex theories. They were anti-intellectual. Now they are something worse: pseudo-intellectual... more »
Personality testing will soon be a $6.5-billion industry. How did we come to submit to this belief in self-typologies?... more »
We think of intellectual communities as broad-minded. They are in fact narrow and insular. Larry Summers explains... more »
Marshall Sahlins insisted that gods, spirits, and demons are worthy of scientific study. What would such a science teach us?... more »
Quantum physics and gravity don’t fit together, a problem that has plagued physics for 50 years. A novel theory offers a reconciliation... more »
Edwin Frank: “Books are now deemed to be important the same way it is important to find the best lightbulb”... more »
Academic philosophy rewards specialized, jargon-laden individual genius. A better system of social thinking exists: folklore... more »
The best of W.H. Auden’s late work was animated by the tension between the aesthetic and the ethical... more »
Overlooked amid the swagger of the New York Jewish intellectuals, Pearl Kazin led a remarkable life of freedom and frustration... more »
“The people and groups and agendas grouped together as the left contain not just contradictions but sworn enemies”... more »
What if writing history were less about archives and ideas and more about forensics and genomes?... more »
Do our lives consist of the stories we tell about our ourselves? Galen Strawson on a view that’s ascendant and plainly wrong... more »
The editor and memoirist Diana Athill’s philosophy was that fidelity is a faulty mechanism on which to base a relationship... more »
“The measure of a society’s stage of moral sophistication is how infrequently it requires us to trade gratuities like love and poetry for food”... more »
Self-help is often glib, politically obtuse, and intellectually dishonest. Why, then, are philosophers writing it?... more »
The psychic entanglement of the generations, the tumult between old and the young: What we need Mary Gaitskill for... more »
After the suicide of his wife, Blake Butler wrote a book detailing her secret life. Was it art — or literary revenge porn?... more »
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