• Anti-Blackness in Sci-Fi Publishing

    Less than two percent of science fiction stories published in 2015 were by black writers. And a recent study found that black speculative fiction writers face “universal” racism—more damning evidence demonstrating the institutionalized racism in book publishing, and the importance of…

  • HORN! REVIEWS: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

    HORN! REVIEWS: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

    Textbooks obfuscate the past, making science seem a smooth and cumulative process.

  • Ghost in the Machine

    At the Los Angeles Review of Books, Professor Ted Underwood talks about why Digital Humanities, the new discipline he’s often associated with, doesn’t exist: It’s true that [Digital Humanities] can be aligned with managerial thinking—administrators like it. It can also…

  • Dan Weiss’s Morning Coffee

    You should read the New York Time’s intense and epic reporting on the splintering of the Arab World and 13 years of the Iraq War. How will Pokemon Go change cities (I hate 2016)? Elsewhere: Geoff Manaugh on lost landscapes. Not to…

  • The Rumpus interview with Stuart Dybek

    The Rumpus interview with Stuart Dybek

    Stuart Dybek discusses the forthcoming The Best Small Fictions 2016, the invisibility of anecdote, and why the art of transition is the art of the short story.

  • Chris Kraus + Jill Soloway

    Chris Kraus’s experimental, cult classic I Love Dick has been adapted for TV by Jill Soloway, and it’s time to revisit and scrutinize Kraus’s use of the slur “kike,” and indeed Kraus’s sense of her own Jewishness. In the Los…

  • The Literary Value of Bodybuilding

    With the pinnacle of human physical achievement on full display at the Summer Olympics, enjoy this article about writing literature about the ins and outs of bodybuilding.

  • “Meat Is Murder,” the Video Game

    The Smiths and PETA have released a video game in a collaborative effort to fight the violence of industrial agriculture’s treatment of livestock. Taking its inspiration the song “Meat Is Murder,” This Beautiful Creature Must Die asks players to fight to save chickens,…

  • Remembering Killed-Off Characters

    In an epic confessional letter at Lit Hub, author Stuart Nadler mourns all the characters he’s abandoned, maimed, and murdered for the sake of the grueling writing process. These lost creations and their universes live on in his memories and drafts…

  • The Rumpus Review of Seoul Searching

    The Rumpus Review of Seoul Searching

    Seeing is a critical part of normalizing, and though it seems like a rudimentary expectation, it’s important for American audiences to see Korean-Americans simply living their lives.

  • Eliot to the Internet

    Certainly Eliot’s mind was a vast, labyrinthine echo chamber, and perhaps more than any other canonical poet of the English language, with the possible exception of his great antagonist John Milton, he was conscious of the previous uses by other…

  • Song of the Day: “Chan Chan”

    The original Buena Vista Social Club was a members-only group that formed in Havana, Cuba, during the first half of the 20th century. The club became a cultural nexus for the city, drawing in musicians and artists who would perform at…