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Ethan Hawke’s Wildcat rescued Flannery O’Connor’s brilliantly bleak work for me
Polygon Games· 3 hours ago“A Good Man is Hard to Find” shocked my classmates in AP English Literature with its bleak ending,...
9 LGBTQIA+ Icons You Didn’t Know Were Critics
Rotten Tomatoes· 3 hours agoIn honor of Pride, Rotten Tomatoes is highlighting LGBTQIA+ voices in our Pride Month hub. As part of the celebration, we’re spotlighting some of the...
Poet John Burnside on drug addiction, his abusive father and winning the ‘British Nobel’
The Telegraph via Yahoo News· 4 hours agoJohn Burnside still cannot quite believe he is the winner of the 2023 David Cohen Prize for ...
Author Cass Sunstein unlocks what it takes to be as big as The Beatles
Salon via Yahoo News· 6 days agoJackson about Romantic literature, which shows that Blake and Austen...Wordsworth and Keats among...
Ways of Seeing: What do we want? Nuance! - Addison Independent
The Addison County Independent· 1 day agoIt depicts a protester carrying a sign that, at first blush, looks like many a protest sign through...
Sara Pankenier Weld: We need the humanities today more than ever
Chicago Tribune· 3 days agoAs a student in my humanities classroom once noted, by reading a book like this, a man who is warm...
Opinion: The ideal beach read? It's not what you'd expect
Los Angeles Times Opinion via Yahoo News· 4 days agoAnd then I left those worlds behind...are, I hope, transported by our picks, because that’s what...
How Franz Kafka can help us understand the history of segregation in America
The Forward· 3 days agoStanley Corngold, a Princeton scholar of German literature, was visiting Jack Greenberg, a Columbia...
How the Middle Ages are being revisited through Indigenous perspectives - EconoTimes
EconoTimes· 3 days agoTolkien’s Lord of the Rings...what is popularly imagined in the West as the Middle Ages to visualize...
summer books
Columbia University News· 20 hours agoCities are core drivers of the climate crisis, as Dickson Despommier, an emeritus professor of public health and microbiology at Columbia, details in The New City: