Culture

Why I Call Myself a Socialist

Why I Call Myself a Socialist Why I Call Myself a Socialist

Is the world really a stage?

Feb 3, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Wallace Shawn

Duncan’s Divagations: On Robert Duncan and H.D.

Duncan’s Divagations: On Robert Duncan and H.D. Duncan’s Divagations: On Robert Duncan and H.D.

Robert Duncan saw in H.D.'s poetry “The story of survival, the evolution of forms in which live survives.”

Feb 3, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Ange Mlinko

Rough Patch Rough Patch

You can tell, by symptoms of neglect, something of his circumstance: the chipped and buckled eaves, deflated jack-o-lantern beside the stoop, an ember under snow, or red ants swarming the sill, crossing a line of cinnamon in some far-flung military action. You can tell, by frying onions, their thick domestic weather, or the grim satisfaction with which his vacuum overlooks a plain of fur and dust. I can tell from a little just what a whole lot means. You treat me like somebody you ain't never seen. Hackle stacker, mayfly cripple, and Bloom's parachute ant crowd an ashtray—to rarify the quality of failure. Mornings, a frowzy Manx kneads his chest with claws unsheathed, thrumming with desire and contempt in equal measure. Every other weekend, he rolls out a court-appointed cot from the closet for his daughter. You can feel, with your fingertips against his metal door, vibrations from the interstate or seismic evidence of Furry Lewis, circa 1928.

Feb 3, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Devin Johnston

Viewing Conditions: On Jonathan Rosenbaum Viewing Conditions: On Jonathan Rosenbaum

For Jonathan Rosenbaum, the golden age of filmgoing is as dead as the drive-in, but cinephilia is thriving.

Feb 3, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Akiva Gottlieb

Things as They Are Things as They Are

Lee Chang-dong's Poetry, Jorge Michel Grau's We Are What We Are, Ron Howard's The Dilemma

Feb 3, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Dan Bell, RIP Dan Bell, RIP

On the late Daniel Bell, the very archetype of a committed liberal intellectual, and The New Republic's Marty Peretz, plus reader mail.

Jan 27, 2011 / Blog / Eric Alterman

Berlusconi Scandals Berlusconi Scandals

Old satyrs revere Berlusconi. When finding himself home alone, he Just pays a good wage For girls underage, And gets them, though he’s old and bony.

Jan 27, 2011 / Column / Calvin Trillin

The Return of the Culture Wars

The Return of the Culture Wars The Return of the Culture Wars

As before, hypocrites are lining their coffers by pandering to ignorance and xenophobia.

Jan 27, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Doug Harvey

The Weasel’s Tooth: On W.B. Yeats

The Weasel’s Tooth: On W.B. Yeats The Weasel’s Tooth: On W.B. Yeats

W.B. Yeats’s poems on Ireland contemplate failures: not of poetry but of public life in all its forms.

Jan 27, 2011 / Books & the Arts / Stephen Burt

Shelf Life Shelf Life

Merrill Gilfillan’s The Bark of the Dog and The Warbler Road; Tony Judt’s The Memory Chalet.

Jan 27, 2011 / Books & the Arts / John Palattella

x