Ms. Adventures in Higher Education
Katherine West and Chet Whipley's graphic essay about the spectatorial nature of women’s vulnerability and visibility in the workplace.
Katherine West and Chet Whipley's graphic essay about the spectatorial nature of women’s vulnerability and visibility in the workplace.
Jonathan Foltz on “Twin Peaks: The Return.”
Patrick Kurp revisits the poems of Richard Wilbur, who passed away on October 14 at age 96.
The poet Willis Barnstone on the dangers of translating the Bible.
Alex Landragin on tinnitus as a burden and an existential clarion call.
Jackson Arn reviews Agnès Varda and JR’s “Faces Places (Visages Villages).”
James O’Sullivan finds magic and meaning in “All the Delicate Duplicates,” a work of electronic literature by Mez Breeze and Andy Campbell.
Roslyn Fuller considers the Pirate Party's recent success in Iceland and whether it could signal a new path in American politics.
Nathan Scott McNamara visits Renee Gladman at her home in Connecticut to discuss loneliness, love, and her invented city of Ravicka.
Alex Weintraub considers the act of making love in Claire Denis's "Let the Sunshine In."
Gerald Maa on Helena Modjeska, the quintessentially Californian immigrant, homesteader, and theatrical star.
On the Unabomber, the Dark Mountain Project, and the back-to-nature movement.
Our writer attends the Festival of El Salvador del Mundo and finds memories of a war that never really ended.
Antoinette Nwandu reads “Sister Outsider” by Audre Lorde after Charlottesville.
Walking the precinct versus marching in the streets: how does each move the needle?
Masha Shpolberg on three festival films from Russia, Turkey, and Romania.