• Weekly Geekery

    Facial recognition technology is a little racist. Two writers talk about the end of the world and more importantly, the end of social media. Robots are just babies—tiny, terrifying babies. Nabokov and butterfly sex.

  • The Story Behind the Story

    At this stoplight, you might begin to think, “I’ve been here before, there is nothing new to notice.” But it seems to me that we actually live here, and we often fail to notice what is in our own yard.…

  • This Week in Indie Bookstores

    A Buffalo bookstore owner was the target of an FBI investigation for more than two years, and now he wants to know why. Can independent bookstores survive in the state that gave us Antonin Scalia and Tony Soprano? San Francisco’s Castro…

  • All About Eva

    She’s black, but not local, this new colleague who wears her boots and jeans and scarf with a bohemian aplomb that causes the others to ask her where she shops. “Oh, you know, thrift stores,” she says with a chuckle.…

  • The Longest Night by Andria Williams

    The Longest Night by Andria Williams

    Amanda Fields reviews The Longest Night by Andria Williams today in Rumpus Books.

  • What Country… Should Give You Harbour?

    Allison Meier writes at Hyperallergic on a speech, recently digitized by the British Library, that proves to be the only example of Shakespeare’s handwriting other than a few signatures. The excerpt comes from Sir Thomas More, a play written in collaboration,…

  • Dan Weiss’s Morning Coffee

    Good news everyone! Manta rays might be self aware! We love well-organized garbage. Racing to preserve Soviet design. More important news: Cuba is still a cool place to photograph. When I die bury me under a pig shaped diner.

  • The Ant and the Grasshopper Can Coexist

    The Ant and the Grasshopper Can Coexist

    Of course, it’s not only parents who teach us about gender roles. Sometimes it feels like we’re absorbing them with our first gasps from the womb.

  • The Body Does Not Lie

    For Guernica, Jen Karetnick interviews dancer Natica Angilly about dance poetry, its meaning, and how she became involved in it: Natural, developed, and studied efforts to share our singular and group experience are worth pursuing in all expressive languages, especially dance…

  • The Hardest Thing to Survive

    As a kid I was that literal, thinking I lived in fiction, so let me write it. It started there, and it seems it’s going to end there. In a conversation excerpted from Upstairs at the Strand, Junot Diaz and Hilton…

  • A Blind Eye to History

    At Aeon, Robert Neer discusses the particular absence of military history from American universities. While general history courses cover the overall societal impact of some military campaigns and political science covers the effect of military action on government, Neer notes…

  • I Want You Turns Forty

    Marvin Gaye’s incredible record has turned forty and to celebrate the greatness of the work, Pitchfork has published a tribute to I Want You and to Gaye’s tactile sound and the history of african american music and resistance in this country. Read the…

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