Language Arts

Helios Helios

Strong horses, Percherons, bred for imperturbability and speed: Aethon, Eous, Pyrois, Phlegon, what names to call a conflagration by. Two decades with the force, and you’d little use for people, but horses, that was a different matter: strong horses, swift as shadows lengthening across the tile bed, a father could not hold them, how could a god.

Dec 4, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Amanda Jernigan

Old Boys

Old Boys Old Boys

David O. Russell’s American Hustle; Spike Lee’s Oldboy

Dec 4, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Without Respite

Without Respite Without Respite

Seeing not a person but a thing was the crime of crimes for Primo Levi.

Nov 25, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Vivian Gornick

Debtpop

Debtpop Debtpop

Thinking about debt has become pop, and David Graeber’s Debt is the genre’s “Stairway to Heaven.”

Nov 25, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Joshua Clover

Monumental, Imperial

Monumental, Imperial Monumental, Imperial

The beauty and muchness of Ai Weiwei’s art is often underwhelming.

Nov 25, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Barry Schwabsky

Other Roles

Other Roles Other Roles

Auntie man? Black writer? Negress? In The Women, Hilton Als is Hilton Als.

Nov 25, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Aaron Thier

Hannah and Her Admirers

Hannah and Her Admirers Hannah and Her Admirers

Margarethe von Trotta’s biopic of Hannah Arendt is a film about ideas that remains intellectually detached from them.

Nov 19, 2013 / Books & the Arts / David Rieff

The Museum of the Revolution

The Museum of the Revolution The Museum of the Revolution

The life and work of Victor Serge represents the Russian democratic revolution that never was.

Nov 19, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Sophie Pinkham

Power Down

Power Down Power Down

The humanitarian impulse has not vanished from US foreign policy. It has simply split into two camps.

Nov 19, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Thomas Meaney

Sea Urchins Sea Urchins

The sea urchins star the sea floor like sunken mines from a rust-smirched war filmed in black and white. Or if they are stars they are negatives of light, their blind beams brittle purple needles with no eyes: not even spittle and a squint will thread the sea’s indigo ribbons. We float overhead like angels, or whales, with our soft underbellies just beyond their pales, their dirks and rankles. Nothing is bare as bare feet, naked as ankles. They whisker their risks in the fine print of footnotes’ irksome asterisks. Their extraneous complaints are lodged with dark dots, subcutaneous ellipses… seizers seldom extract  even with olive oil, tweezers.   Sun-bleached, they unclench their sharps, doom scalps their hackles, unbuttons their stench. Their shells are embossed and beautiful calculus, studded turbans, tossed among drummed pebbles and plastic flotsam—so smooth, so fragile, baubles like mermaid doubloons, these rose-, mauve-, pistachio- tinted macaroons.

Nov 19, 2013 / Books & the Arts / A.E. Stallings

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