1917 to 2023
2023
Rumours have it that drugs are available even at Matraville these days as garden hoses are used to quench the thirst
Some of the users are easily recognised it is much much harder to catch the dealers …
Articles of Note
Beware the sensitivity read. For some publishers words like “foreign,” “God,” “nerd,” and “freshman” are off limits... more »
New Books
In 1966, Philip Rieff labeled and lambasted “therapeutic culture.” It is ever more apparent he was on to something... more »
Essays & Opinions
Are there objectively correct answers to the big philosophical questions? A meta-ethicist makes the case that there are... more »
Articles of Note
In Central European spa towns rich in literary history, you can bathe in everything from beer to radon... more »
New Books
How four women – Arendt, de Beauvoir, Rand, Weil – concluded that philosophy had to be utterly reimagined... more »
Essays & Opinions
“You’re not allowed to be whiter than him ... And you cannot wear a hat because that is his thing.” Patricia Lockwood meets the pope... more »
Articles of Note
Moby-Dick had been out of print for decades when the author died. Since then, we’ve rediscovered the Melville we need... more »
New Books
Schoenberg, stigmatization. The argument that classical music took a wrong turn in the middle of the 20th century is downright wrong... more »
Essays & Opinions
Susan Sontag and George Steiner could be extraordinarily ill-mannered. But their critical ardor remains infectious... more »
Articles of Note
Spare a thought for cliché-verre. Part printmaking, part photography, this 19th-century artistic medium never caught on... more »
New Books
The chapter. It dates to 13th-century narrative units in the Gospels, before the separation of sentences and even of words... more »
Essays & Opinions
A best-selling philosophical text on Amazon is the decade-old dissertation of a writer best known as Bronze Age Pervert... more »
Articles of Note
Reassessing the work of Georg Lukács means expurgating Bolshevik themes and some long-outdated Marxist concepts. That’s asking a lot... more »
New Books
Humans make machines, and machines remake humans. Small devices have revolutionized humanity in big ways... more »
Essays & Opinions
Rescuing Pushkin from commemoration and co-optation: He “deserves to be stripped of his official veneration to reveal the irreverent poet underneath”... more »
Articles of Note
The jargon of 17th-century London, the slang of 1960s teens — if you can imagine it, it’s in Madeline Kripke’s dictionary collection... more »
New Books
For the 11th-century Benedictine monk Saint Anselm, reading was a form of communion. It still is... more »
Essays & Opinions
Censorship is a widespread problem among scientists. It’s most often driven by the scientists themselves... more »
Articles of Note
In the early 1900s, almost no Jewish person could be hired in publishing. By the 1960s, there was talk of a Jewish literary mafia. What happened?... more »
New Books
Who was the greatest writer of the Latin American Boom? Not Mario Vargas Llosa or Gabriel García Márquez, but José Donoso... more »
Essays & Opinions
Do animals need complex brains to experience consciousness? New work on scallops, jellyfish, and crabs suggests not... more »
Articles of Note
Undergoing cancer treatment, Paul Auster has thoughts on the American obsession with closure — “the stupidest idea” he’s ever heard of... more »
New Books
The liberal’s dilemma. Are they suffering from their own success, or from the fact that liberalism has never been tried?... more »
Essays & Opinions
When Gawker went girly and created a home for radical self-disclosure and all-abiding contempt. Moe Tkacik looks back... more »