Riding the Tiger, Riding the Wave: Christian Conservatives and Radical Anti-Modernism
Benjamin R. Teitelbaum on the resonance between the works of authors Charles Chaput and Rod Dreher and those of fascist anti-modernist Julius Evola.
Benjamin R. Teitelbaum on the resonance between the works of authors Charles Chaput and Rod Dreher and those of fascist anti-modernist Julius Evola.
Anjali Vaidya reflects on Anjum Hasan’s cosmopolitan urban wanderers.
Dear Television ponders which chosen one is the most chosen, and whether there's something else dragons can do.
India’s “hugging saint” may not be warm and cozy in her politics, says our correspondent.
Stephen Marche reflects on David Shields’s “Reality Hunger” in the age of Trump and the post-fact.
Joy Hui Lin looks to "Attack on Titan" for hope in these times.
Neha Sharma reflects on the rise of Hindu fundamentalism in India.
Does Trump fit the clinical definition of a narcissist? And if so, what does that say about the country that elected him?
Dear Television discusses what happens when the Game of Thrones is only played by veterans and no rookies.
Robert Zaretsky reflects on 250th anniversary of Catherine the Great’s Legislative Commission to propose a new code of law for the Russian Empire.
GD Dess considers the complex female identities at the heart of the Neapolitan novels of Elena Ferrante.
How does one maintain a self when losing an other who is also one's “self”?
Should we be alarmed?
Tarly Tarly Bo-Barly Banana-Fana Fo-Farly Fee-Fy-Mo-Marly TARLY!
Looking back on what I wrote in my ambitious youth, I catch myself mentally revising every other sentence. But I was far less likely to get stuck back then.
Part of a LARB forum in which philosophers reflect on the legacy of Richard Rorty.