There is no critic in the world more cited than the Postmodernist Michel Foucault. Research suggests that the theorist has ...
Far more than a geographical reality, the Nile is the narrative thread of identity and the ultimate source of inspiration for ...
A new history of American apologetics from Daniel K. Williams offers careful detail, worthwhile lessons, and an ambitious, sprawling, rollicking narrative.
Oslo’s Deichman Bjørvika differs from downtown libraries in America by its near-total absence of homelessness.
From a portrait of a declining Judy Gardland to comedy, film adaptations and musicals, there’s much to look forward to in the ...
Women like J.K. Rowling, who dare to suggest that biological sex exists and matters, are now vilified by the very feminists ...
In an age of fragmentation, the cumulative insights of philosophers, scientists, poets, and mystics offer a discipline of attentiveness—a path to think carefully, act justly, and remain open to wonder ...
John Rees looks at a recent controversy in academic Marxism Christmas is a time for comedy specials, and this year has ...
The man convicted of murdering Westchester County social worker was sentenced just shy of the maximum prison term on Thursday ...
The concept of "hard work v privilege," and what either one says about someone's social status, is an important one.
In Make Your Own Job, Erik Baker shows just how long Americans have scrambled to pile work on top of work—and at what cost.
In 2000, Robert Putnam observed something peculiar. More Americans than ever were bowling. But fewer people were bowling in ...