Walt Whitman's homosexuality. To think of him simply as a gay man is fraught, not least because he was primarily interested in boys, not men... more »
The first appearance of the word Orwellian? Mary McCarthy used it to describe the fashion magazine Flair... more »
The click-swipe-and-rate economy has devastated journalism, art, literature, and entertainment. Now it's coming for the academy... more »
The intersectionality wars: When an obscure academic theory goes mainstream and becomes something other than itself... more »
The Regency years in Britain — 1811-1820 — involved more than spotlessly dressed dandies, lascivious rakes, and Elizabeth Bennet look-alikes... more »
When are writers polymaths, and when are they merely trespassing superficially into areas of knowledge they haven’t mastered? The lesson of Naomi Wolf... more »
To Oscar Wilde, there was no such thing as a moral or immoral piece of art. Why has this view fallen out of favor with critics?... more »
E.P. Thompson suffered an endless series of heroic defeats but refused grubby compromises and went down guns blazing... more »
Art in an age of self-exposure. Gone is the withholding of secrets — novelists now put self-consciousness front and center... more »
Peter Max’s psychedelic art always sold well. As he developed dementia, opportunists stepped in. Cue the surreal allegations and the lawsuits... more »
John Williams put a lot of himself into his most famous protagonist, William Stoner, a lackluster professor and difficult man... more »
The idea that thinkers should distinguish private from public views is associated with Leo Strauss and the right. Now it's ascendant on the left... more »
Quillette bills itself as a rare bastion of free thought. Is it an island of sanity — or reactionary conservatism for the Ph.D. set?... more »
Peacock tongue and fried dormice, brain-stuffed sausages, caviar-stuffed crayfish, liters of wine poured by naked waiters: The Romans took gluttony seriously... more »
Should writers still make things up? With more fact-based fiction, purely fictional fiction faces a new reality... more »
The enclosed life. In the Middle Ages in Europe, hundreds of religious recluses permanently sealed themselves inside small rooms. Why?... more »
Art criticism is art. It makes meaning out of the seemingly indecipherable, elucidating existential stakes. No one does this better than Peter Schjeldahl... more »
“The best work that anybody ever writes is the work that is on the verge of embarrassing him," said Arthur Miller, who understood shame... more »
Imagine writing a masterpiece and never getting to see it in print. Such was the fate of Vasily Grossman... more »
Step aside, Bacon, Hobbes, Locke, Hume, Mill. Meet the oddballs, underdogs, and outcasts of British philosophy... more »
She had Sartre for conversation; he, only drunks and gamblers. Inside the short-lived long-distance relationship of Nelson Algren and Simone de Beauvoir... more »
Storytelling was Shakespeare’s gift, and no stories gripped him more than those of classical antiquity... more »
The dissents of Wendell Berry. His dislikes include weather forecasts, unsmelly bathrooms, ballroom dancing, and the moon landing... more »
Leslie Epstein has spent 40 years in the same wooden chair in the same lopsided room teaching fiction. The job is changing... more »
Natural preserves have been havens from the modern world, a place to get away. On social media, the good spots can no longer hide... more »
In the Western tradition, what’s the most powerful and persuasive construct of the human imagination? It’s the idea of hell... more »
Slaughterhouse Five at 50. Despite Vonnegut’s conviction that the book was a failure, it has endured surprisingly well... more »
Mozart’s revolution. He composed for aristocrats and the public alike, exploding class lines in a frenzy of creativity... more »
The history of psychiatry is the history of our beliefs about our own minds. Breakthrough and disappointment, dogmas and counter-dogmas... more »
"How much you can learn from someone by looking very carefully at them without judgement.” Lucian Freud’s brute nudity... more »
The odyssey of Sean Wilentz, part New York intellectual, part Beltway pundit, part meticulous historian... more »
It cannot be the fate of the book to become tweetlike. The book must stand above. A case study in what happens when it doesn't... more »
The web is awash in tips from successful women writers — here’s what they’re reading, their Sunday routine. Does it help us understand them?... more »
Pity the precocious? The hyper-intelligent often suffer from boredom, isolation, and depression — and so genius may not be the gift we perceive it to be... more »
How Islam shaped Western thought. The relationship led to a flowering of political philosophy, thought experiment, and polemic... more »
“A monster of arrogance and inconsideration.” Susan Sontag cut through received wisdom — an approach sorely missing today... more »
Hemingway, war correspondent. His arrangement with Collier’s magazine was doomed from the start — and a $187,000 expense claim didn’t help... more »
As Oliver Sacks wrote, between mania and depression lies “a narrow ridge of normality.” Despite his best efforts, he sometimes slipped off that ridge... more »
New books reinterpret Homeric poems toward feminist ends. But in advancing a 21st-century politics, do they rob readers of ethical ambiguities?... more »
Nathan Glazer was the rare social scientist who was as indifferent to grand theorizing as he was to ideological consistency... more »
In the last decades of the 19th century, séances abounded, and austere sects speculated about geology. Darwin’s world was awash with spiritualized science... more »
One notable thing about Stefan Zweig’s writing is how varied the reactions to it have been — in his own time and our own... more »
Harper Lee was always writing — letters, casino reviews, bar ballads. Why wasn’t she wasn’t publishing anything?... more »
“Tonight I have achieved a fresh perspective on myself. I now understand my sexuality." Foucault on LSD... more »
Make philosophy great again. The field has been reduced to bland Continental and analytic variants — a trend that must be reversed... more »
Artificial humans are a cliché of science fiction. When they finally arrive, they will seem to some a disappointment. Ian McEwan explains... more »
The problem with eternity: it is undesirable and incoherent; it kills meaning and collapses value. Can this realization be liberating?... more »
Humor is often lost in translation, especially if it's being translated from German. Yes, the jokes are ponderous. But they're funny, too... more »
Bolaño and Ferrante caught on, but, in general, Americans continue to shrug at foreign fiction. What has sent the market for translations into decline?... more »
Being Einstein meant people asking your opinion even about stupid things. "Why is it that no one understands me and everyone likes me?"... more »
The myth of advice. Successful people want to be helpful. But their advice sounds empty and canned — because it is... more »
Pinocchio, beyond mendacity. The moral of the folktale, dark and complex, concerns the value of education under authoritarianism... more »
"I greet you at the beginning of a great career," Lawrence Ferlinghetti wrote Allen Ginsberg. "When do I get the manuscript?" Thus began the effort to publish Howl, a landmark case of attempted censorship... more »
Today’s intellectual mode: “Learn an attitude and inquire no further.” Marilynne Robinson on why certain ideas, like economic “associationism,” have vanished... more »
Welcome to academe’s extinction event. What's that you smell? A noxious combination of failure, whiskey, and professional collapse... more »
When political failure leads to intellectual success. “Losers,” said Eric Hobsbawm, “make the best historians.” He was an embodiment of that principle... more »
The cultural contradictions of Daniel Bell. He never could quite reconcile the Jewish conservative and the Yiddish radical within him... more »
A lifetime of looking. To view Bruegel’s monumental works is to encounter an encyclopedic totality and a love for the world’s multiplicity... more »
Reading Catcher in the Rye in Moscow. For Soviet audiences, imbibing Western culture — and misinterpreting it — was an expression of a freedom... more »
E.H. Carr and the fate of facts. “By and large, the historian will get the kind of facts he wants. History means interpretation”... more »
Sherwood Anderson, sage of small-town life, was reviled in his own hometown. The local librarian burned copies of Winesburg, Ohio... more »
For Samuel Johnson, the value of sociability was a life lesson. "I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not make a new acquaintance"... more »
Wit, mockery, joking, buffoonery: The oldest monastic rule we know of forbade joking. Laughter has long had a dangerously democratic quality... more »
Walt Whitman's homosexuality. To think of him simply as a gay man is fraught, not least because he was primarily interested in boys, not men... more »
The intersectionality wars: When an obscure academic theory goes mainstream and becomes something other than itself... more »
To Oscar Wilde, there was no such thing as a moral or immoral piece of art. Why has this view fallen out of favor with critics?... more »
Peter Max’s psychedelic art always sold well. As he developed dementia, opportunists stepped in. Cue the surreal allegations and the lawsuits... more »
Quillette bills itself as a rare bastion of free thought. Is it an island of sanity — or reactionary conservatism for the Ph.D. set?... more »
The enclosed life. In the Middle Ages in Europe, hundreds of religious recluses permanently sealed themselves inside small rooms. Why?... more »
Imagine writing a masterpiece and never getting to see it in print. Such was the fate of Vasily Grossman... more »
Storytelling was Shakespeare’s gift, and no stories gripped him more than those of classical antiquity... more »
Natural preserves have been havens from the modern world, a place to get away. On social media, the good spots can no longer hide... more »
Mozart’s revolution. He composed for aristocrats and the public alike, exploding class lines in a frenzy of creativity... more »
The odyssey of Sean Wilentz, part New York intellectual, part Beltway pundit, part meticulous historian... more »
Pity the precocious? The hyper-intelligent often suffer from boredom, isolation, and depression — and so genius may not be the gift we perceive it to be... more »
Hemingway, war correspondent. His arrangement with Collier’s magazine was doomed from the start — and a $187,000 expense claim didn’t help... more »
Nathan Glazer was the rare social scientist who was as indifferent to grand theorizing as he was to ideological consistency... more »
Harper Lee was always writing — letters, casino reviews, bar ballads. Why wasn’t she wasn’t publishing anything?... more »
Artificial humans are a cliché of science fiction. When they finally arrive, they will seem to some a disappointment. Ian McEwan explains... more »
Bolaño and Ferrante caught on, but, in general, Americans continue to shrug at foreign fiction. What has sent the market for translations into decline?... more »
Pinocchio, beyond mendacity. The moral of the folktale, dark and complex, concerns the value of education under authoritarianism... more »
Welcome to academe’s extinction event. What's that you smell? A noxious combination of failure, whiskey, and professional collapse... more »
A lifetime of looking. To view Bruegel’s monumental works is to encounter an encyclopedic totality and a love for the world’s multiplicity... more »
Sherwood Anderson, sage of small-town life, was reviled in his own hometown. The local librarian burned copies of Winesburg, Ohio... more »
What mechanisms of evolution led to the emergence of high-level cooperation among humans? E.O. Wilson and the fight over altruism... more »
Bergsonmania. Henri Bergson’s lectures on philosophy led to mobbed venues and the first-ever traffic jam on Broadway. Why was he so popular?... more »
This month thousands of scholars will gather for the Congress on Medieval Studies. Among the questions up for debate: Does the field have a white-supremacy problem?... more »
Hitler’s favorite conductor, Wilhelm Furtwängler was known for a wobbly beat and the cultivation of inexactitude — a sort of spontaneity by design... more »
“A Seditious man and of a disordered mind, and a person of bad name, reputation and Conversation.” So determined the court regarding Daniel Defoe... more »
Camille Paglia joined the University of the Arts in 1984. Now a group of students believes it is too dangerous to talk openly about her ideas on campus... more »
After at least 14,000 years of living with dogs, why are we only now getting around to considering what goes on inside their heads?... more »
David Brooks gets woke. “Maybe racial injustice is at the core of everything,” he says. “I’ve had that thought”... more »
When Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak met Jacques Derrida. "I did not recognize him until he came up to me and said, in French, “Je m’appelle Jacques Derrida,” and I almost died... more »
“Steering the aircraft into a cloud of flak.” Bari Weiss is a punching bag for lefty Twitter. Is she really, as she suggests, just a misunderstood liberal humanist?... more »
Writers get all the credit — they appear glamorous and sexy, with work routines to be emulated. Translators, in contrast, are invisible. That should change... more »
In March, Amherst College posted a 40-page glossary of terms involving identity, privilege, oppression, and inclusion. The document is almost comically tendentious... more »
We know so little of the worlds beneath our feet. And yet with cave art, burial complexes, and melting glaciers, these impenetrable strata draw us still... more »
A debate that wasn’t. The Žižek-Peterson showdown featured two incomprehensible Ph.D.s talking past each other. Nathan J. Robinson suffered through it... more »
Robert Caro doesn’t worry about the future of history and biography. He does worry about the quality of the prose in future works of history and biography... more »
John Coltrane was the archetypal creative obsessive, a trait obscured by his canonization as a spiritual seeker on a higher plane than mortal men... more »
The Proust of science fiction. Gene Wolfe, author of Catholic-tinged, modernist-leaning pulp fiction, died on Sunday. He was 87... more »
The New Yorker's Goreyesque rejection of Edward Gorey: “The people in your pictures are too strange and the ideas, we think, are not funny"... more »
Shakespeare relied on hundreds of books as source material. Yet we have no description of his library or a record of its dispersal when he died... more »
The first appearance of the word Orwellian? Mary McCarthy used it to describe the fashion magazine Flair... more »
The Regency years in Britain — 1811-1820 — involved more than spotlessly dressed dandies, lascivious rakes, and Elizabeth Bennet look-alikes... more »
E.P. Thompson suffered an endless series of heroic defeats but refused grubby compromises and went down guns blazing... more »
John Williams put a lot of himself into his most famous protagonist, William Stoner, a lackluster professor and difficult man... more »
Peacock tongue and fried dormice, brain-stuffed sausages, caviar-stuffed crayfish, liters of wine poured by naked waiters: The Romans took gluttony seriously... more »
Art criticism is art. It makes meaning out of the seemingly indecipherable, elucidating existential stakes. No one does this better than Peter Schjeldahl... more »
Step aside, Bacon, Hobbes, Locke, Hume, Mill. Meet the oddballs, underdogs, and outcasts of British philosophy... more »
The dissents of Wendell Berry. His dislikes include weather forecasts, unsmelly bathrooms, ballroom dancing, and the moon landing... more »
In the Western tradition, what’s the most powerful and persuasive construct of the human imagination? It’s the idea of hell... more »
The history of psychiatry is the history of our beliefs about our own minds. Breakthrough and disappointment, dogmas and counter-dogmas... more »
It cannot be the fate of the book to become tweetlike. The book must stand above. A case study in what happens when it doesn't... more »
How Islam shaped Western thought. The relationship led to a flowering of political philosophy, thought experiment, and polemic... more »
As Oliver Sacks wrote, between mania and depression lies “a narrow ridge of normality.” Despite his best efforts, he sometimes slipped off that ridge... more »
In the last decades of the 19th century, séances abounded, and austere sects speculated about geology. Darwin’s world was awash with spiritualized science... more »
“Tonight I have achieved a fresh perspective on myself. I now understand my sexuality." Foucault on LSD... more »
The problem with eternity: it is undesirable and incoherent; it kills meaning and collapses value. Can this realization be liberating?... more »
Being Einstein meant people asking your opinion even about stupid things. "Why is it that no one understands me and everyone likes me?"... more »
"I greet you at the beginning of a great career," Lawrence Ferlinghetti wrote Allen Ginsberg. "When do I get the manuscript?" Thus began the effort to publish Howl, a landmark case of attempted censorship... more »
When political failure leads to intellectual success. “Losers,” said Eric Hobsbawm, “make the best historians.” He was an embodiment of that principle... more »
Reading Catcher in the Rye in Moscow. For Soviet audiences, imbibing Western culture — and misinterpreting it — was an expression of a freedom... more »
For Samuel Johnson, the value of sociability was a life lesson. "I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not make a new acquaintance"... more »
In 1940, thousands of Polish officers, writers, and artists were shot. The painter Józef Czapski survived to contemplate a question: Why him?... more »
Liberty, morality, exceptionalism, xenophobia, oppression — Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen makes the case that American history is intellectual history... more »
You may have heard that Richard Holbrooke was a monstrous egotist. "It’s true," writes his biographer. "It’s even worse than you’ve heard. He lets us ogle ambition in the nude”... more »
The afterlives of philosophers. Nietzsche’s reputation fell almost immediately into disrepute; Kierkegaard, on the other hand, became an inspiration for “mindfulness.” Why?... more »
In 1958 a curious academic impostor entered Hugh Trevor-Roper’s life. He found the man hilarious. Then he got fooled himself... more »
In 1942, Ian Watt was instructed to defend Singapore Zoo from the Japanese. From the perspective of the animals, things did not go well... more »
The tragedy of Martin Buber. He had hoped to provide European Jews with a sustaining connection to their tradition. Then most of them were killed... more »
Shakespeare was many things, but not — inconveniently for a new book on the subject — a great classicist. As a drinking partner put it, the Bard had “small Latin and less Greek”... more »
For Mary Norris, the comma queen, an early encounter with Greek mythology initiatied a lifelong infatuation with the magic of the ancient world... more »
The Larkin wars. Tedious academics debate the humdrum details of the poet’s life, right down to his socks. Less examined: his genius... more »
The business secrets of messianic socialists. From mop factories to property scams, communistic cults in America have been surprisingly entrepreneurial... more »
Sexual solicitations, quid pro quos, and drunken brawls. At the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, professors thought that “free booty was part of their compensation package”... more »
The brain on deadline. In the sports pages of the 1910s and ‘20s is a master course on what it means for a writer to improvise, compress, contrive... more »
"The wholly enlightened earth is radiant with triumphant calamity,” wrote Horkheimer and Adorno. Is enlightenment necessarily accompanied by darker forces?... more »
Why conducting matters. Whether the approach is mystical shaman, tyrant, or traffic cop, how to make sense of this most mysterious of musical professions?... more »
No theater-going experience is as tedious as being forced to listen to ideas now taken for granted. Just try to sit through A Doll’s House... more »
Schadenfreude is surreptitious and subtle. It is not, as a woeful book on the subject has it, simply the range of small, everyday miseries... more »
The earliest limerick did not come from Limerick. It was in Latin and, far from being dirty, it was a call to prayer... more »
The click-swipe-and-rate economy has devastated journalism, art, literature, and entertainment. Now it's coming for the academy... more »
When are writers polymaths, and when are they merely trespassing superficially into areas of knowledge they haven’t mastered? The lesson of Naomi Wolf... more »
Art in an age of self-exposure. Gone is the withholding of secrets — novelists now put self-consciousness front and center... more »
The idea that thinkers should distinguish private from public views is associated with Leo Strauss and the right. Now it's ascendant on the left... more »
Should writers still make things up? With more fact-based fiction, purely fictional fiction faces a new reality... more »
“The best work that anybody ever writes is the work that is on the verge of embarrassing him," said Arthur Miller, who understood shame... more »
She had Sartre for conversation; he, only drunks and gamblers. Inside the short-lived long-distance relationship of Nelson Algren and Simone de Beauvoir... more »
Leslie Epstein has spent 40 years in the same wooden chair in the same lopsided room teaching fiction. The job is changing... more »
Slaughterhouse Five at 50. Despite Vonnegut’s conviction that the book was a failure, it has endured surprisingly well... more »
"How much you can learn from someone by looking very carefully at them without judgement.” Lucian Freud’s brute nudity... more »
The web is awash in tips from successful women writers — here’s what they’re reading, their Sunday routine. Does it help us understand them?... more »
“A monster of arrogance and inconsideration.” Susan Sontag cut through received wisdom — an approach sorely missing today... more »
New books reinterpret Homeric poems toward feminist ends. But in advancing a 21st-century politics, do they rob readers of ethical ambiguities?... more »
One notable thing about Stefan Zweig’s writing is how varied the reactions to it have been — in his own time and our own... more »
Make philosophy great again. The field has been reduced to bland Continental and analytic variants — a trend that must be reversed... more »
Humor is often lost in translation, especially if it's being translated from German. Yes, the jokes are ponderous. But they're funny, too... more »
The myth of advice. Successful people want to be helpful. But their advice sounds empty and canned — because it is... more »
Today’s intellectual mode: “Learn an attitude and inquire no further.” Marilynne Robinson on why certain ideas, like economic “associationism,” have vanished... more »
The cultural contradictions of Daniel Bell. He never could quite reconcile the Jewish conservative and the Yiddish radical within him... more »
E.H. Carr and the fate of facts. “By and large, the historian will get the kind of facts he wants. History means interpretation”... more »
Wit, mockery, joking, buffoonery: The oldest monastic rule we know of forbade joking. Laughter has long had a dangerously democratic quality... more »
Adam Gopnik and the limits of liberalism. Is a defense of moderation and incrementalism really evidence of a refusal to look at reality?... more »
Podcasts are the internet for our ears; they allow us to drift into a soothing, saturated state, distracting us from loneliness. Maybe loneliness is better... more »
More than 7,000 pages of his letters, 8,000 pages of prose, 12,000 pages of Criterion, the magazine he edited. How much T.S. Eliot is too much T.S. Eliot?... more »
Making ends meet as a book reviewer: $250 here and there, $1,000 from The New Republic. Jacob Silverman on the “foolish pursuit of an intellectually engaged life”... more »
The history of cheerfulness. It evolved from a Greek virtue aligned with patience and justice into a self-helpy brand of American nonsense that borders on psychosis... more »
The rise of the literary critic as pre-eminent cultural arbiter was a fluky aberration of the 20th century. The role was always going to be temporary... more »
When ancient battles seem modern. The Epicureans were outraged when their school was bought as a retirement home for an amateur pornographer... more »
John Berger occasionally went awry in evaluating individual artists (like Picasso), but his bullshit detection and skepticism of fashionable ideologies were nonpareil... more »
"The habit of seeing universities as the main or even sole custodians of humanistic culture isn’t just inaccurate; it is bad for universities themselves"... more »
From Gordon Lish’s severity to Michael Pietsch’s maximalism, editors invisibly shape literary trends. That bodes ill as we enter publishing’s Conglomerate Era... more »
Audiobooks and the ethic of efficiency. Increasingly, we don't read so much as listen. It’s an instinct born of a mania for optimizing every minute... more »
Writer, weightlifter, defender of Oscar Wilde. A literary legacy seemed assured for the now-forgotten Frank Harris, who ranked his own genius with Shakespeare’s... more »
Against podcasts. They are tedious and samey and sedative. Don’t waste your precious hours on them. A music critic makes his case... more »
Influence and its discontents. The condition of being influenced is rarely a happy one. Shakespeare knew this. But will “social-media influencers” listen?... more »
Problems at the painter’s guild. Rembrandt was insolvent and thus banned from the group. Only through some legal chicanery could he find work... more »
Nearly 40 years ago, George W.S. Trow lamented what television had done to intellectual life. Imagine what he'd say about social media... more »
Both Tolkien and Lewis experienced World War I’s Western Front. But it’s not clear how this formed either Middle Earth or Narnia... more »
Lévi-Strauss at his peak. He was featured in Playboy and Elle. Even the French soccer team was reorganized along his principles... more »
We admire law and order, embrace reasons and causes, seek predictability. Except when we don't. This tension is evident in modern aesthetics... more »
Philosophy demands refutation and disputation, not kindness and empathy. Fighting, done right, is a form of inquiry... more »
"The time of two balls has passed. The age of one ball has begun." Colm Tóibín confronts cancer, chemo, and months on the sofa... more »
To use words like “fugacious,” “crepuscular,” and “chthonic” is to invite accusations of pretentiousness. But that's better than language austerity... more »
What's happening with Hans Blumenberg? Long eclipsed, the late German thinker is having a moment. On metaphors, history, and lions... more »
Putting sounds into words. "Writing about food is hard; writing about perfume must be even harder; but writing about music is difficult enough"... more »
From life hacks to digital-detox schemes, the pressure to be more efficient is everywhere. Maybe it's time to try something else: Doing nothing... more »
The problem with satire is not that it mocks and belittles; that's the point. The problem is that social media has rendered it both quaint and futile... more »
Intellectual promiscuity, of the sort Nathan Glazer epitomized, is discouraged in higher education today. His death underscores troubling changes in American life... more »
Our age of suspicion. Why are the most impressive intellectuals suspected of harboring the darkest reactionary thoughts? Consider the case of Alain Finkielkraut... more »
We don’t get to choose our influences. Yet it still comes as a surprise to learn that the book that caused Harold Bloom the most "anxiety of influence" is a little-known 1920 fantasy novel... 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