ArtsJournal Classic

AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • A renewing culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The best stories this week were about recovery — not the economic kind, the archival kind. Scientists read the complete text of a Herculaneum scroll for the first time, 2,000 years after Vesuvius carbonized it (Smithsonian Magazine). European film archivists, with Oja Kodar’s blessing, will finish Orson Welles’s Don Quixote, abandoned six decades ago (The Guardian). In Louisiana, an AI model trained on old nursery rhymes is pulling Cajun French back from the edge (The New York Times).

      The scientific evidence that paper beats screens for comprehension keeps mounting (Time), and the case for “rewilding” the reading brain treats deep attention as something you rebuild, not something you mourn (The Atlantic).

      New forms, meanwhile, keep bubbling up: filmmakers are making the movies on smartphones that Hollywood overlooks (The Conversation), and the microdrama is now drawing stars and major studios (Seattle Times).

      Then there’s Vijay Gupta’s argument that classical music doesn’t need a new audience so much as a new why (The Strad).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sidney Jackson talks about the unique role of Chicago Sinfonietta

      Sidney Jackson, President & CEO of Chicago Sinfonietta, talks about their unique role and impact regionally and nationally.

    • The First Great American Symphony? George F. Bristow’s “Niagara”

      Doug Shadle: “As I listened to the symphony — a strange yet monumental work with a choral finale eclipsing Beethoven’s Ninth in scope — the sonic confluences that have given shape and vibrancy to our national culture for 250 years rushed at me for over an hour.” – Early Music America

    • Cleared Commonwealth Prize-winner Explains His Writing Process

      In a phone interview on Tuesday afternoon, Jamir Nazir told me that he feels vindicated—and relieved. “Look, I didn’t use it!” he said about AI. Now that he has won the prize, Nazir said, he is free at last to explain his process and clear his name. – The Atlantic

    • How Noah Webster Pushed (And Pushed Some More) To Americanize The English Language

      “Though it was much maligned during its initial years, The American Spelling Book had a profound pedagogical effect throughout the young nation. … ‘There iz no alternativ,’ implored Webster in 1790, … ‘Every possible reezon that could ever be offered for altering the spelling of wurds, stil exists in full force.’” – Literary Hub

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • A renewing culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The best stories this week were about recovery — not the economic kind, the archival kind. Scientists read the complete text of a Herculaneum scroll for the first time, 2,000 years after Vesuvius carbonized it (Smithsonian Magazine). European film archivists, with Oja Kodar’s blessing, will finish Orson Welles’s Don Quixote, abandoned six decades ago (The Guardian). In Louisiana, an AI model trained on old nursery rhymes is pulling Cajun French back from the edge (The New York Times).

      The scientific evidence that paper beats screens for comprehension keeps mounting (Time), and the case for “rewilding” the reading brain treats deep attention as something you rebuild, not something you mourn (The Atlantic).

      New forms, meanwhile, keep bubbling up: filmmakers are making the movies on smartphones that Hollywood overlooks (The Conversation), and the microdrama is now drawing stars and major studios (Seattle Times).

      Then there’s Vijay Gupta’s argument that classical music doesn’t need a new audience so much as a new why (The Strad).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sidney Jackson talks about the unique role of Chicago Sinfonietta

      Sidney Jackson, President & CEO of Chicago Sinfonietta, talks about their unique role and impact regionally and nationally.

    • The First Great American Symphony? George F. Bristow’s “Niagara”

      Doug Shadle: “As I listened to the symphony — a strange yet monumental work with a choral finale eclipsing Beethoven’s Ninth in scope — the sonic confluences that have given shape and vibrancy to our national culture for 250 years rushed at me for over an hour.” – Early Music America

    • Cleared Commonwealth Prize-winner Explains His Writing Process

      In a phone interview on Tuesday afternoon, Jamir Nazir told me that he feels vindicated—and relieved. “Look, I didn’t use it!” he said about AI. Now that he has won the prize, Nazir said, he is free at last to explain his process and clear his name. – The Atlantic

    • How Noah Webster Pushed (And Pushed Some More) To Americanize The English Language

      “Though it was much maligned during its initial years, The American Spelling Book had a profound pedagogical effect throughout the young nation. … ‘There iz no alternativ,’ implored Webster in 1790, … ‘Every possible reezon that could ever be offered for altering the spelling of wurds, stil exists in full force.’” – Literary Hub

    PEOPLE

    • A renewing culture

      This Week’s Highlights:

      The best stories this week were about recovery — not the economic kind, the archival kind. Scientists read the complete text of a Herculaneum scroll for the first time, 2,000 years after Vesuvius carbonized it (Smithsonian Magazine). European film archivists, with Oja Kodar’s blessing, will finish Orson Welles’s Don Quixote, abandoned six decades ago (The Guardian). In Louisiana, an AI model trained on old nursery rhymes is pulling Cajun French back from the edge (The New York Times).

      The scientific evidence that paper beats screens for comprehension keeps mounting (Time), and the case for “rewilding” the reading brain treats deep attention as something you rebuild, not something you mourn (The Atlantic).

      New forms, meanwhile, keep bubbling up: filmmakers are making the movies on smartphones that Hollywood overlooks (The Conversation), and the microdrama is now drawing stars and major studios (Seattle Times).

      Then there’s Vijay Gupta’s argument that classical music doesn’t need a new audience so much as a new why (The Strad).

      All this week’s stories below, organized by topic.

    • Sidney Jackson talks about the unique role of Chicago Sinfonietta

      Sidney Jackson, President & CEO of Chicago Sinfonietta, talks about their unique role and impact regionally and nationally.

    • The First Great American Symphony? George F. Bristow’s “Niagara”

      Doug Shadle: “As I listened to the symphony — a strange yet monumental work with a choral finale eclipsing Beethoven’s Ninth in scope — the sonic confluences that have given shape and vibrancy to our national culture for 250 years rushed at me for over an hour.” – Early Music America

    • Cleared Commonwealth Prize-winner Explains His Writing Process

      In a phone interview on Tuesday afternoon, Jamir Nazir told me that he feels vindicated—and relieved. “Look, I didn’t use it!” he said about AI. Now that he has won the prize, Nazir said, he is free at last to explain his process and clear his name. – The Atlantic

    • How Noah Webster Pushed (And Pushed Some More) To Americanize The English Language

      “Though it was much maligned during its initial years, The American Spelling Book had a profound pedagogical effect throughout the young nation. … ‘There iz no alternativ,’ implored Webster in 1790, … ‘Every possible reezon that could ever be offered for altering the spelling of wurds, stil exists in full force.’” – Literary Hub

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      • The Two Versions Of Who We Really Are

        Jean-Paul Sartre, for instance, insists that for humans ‘existence precedes essence’. We do not have an essence until we give ourselves an essence. In short, ‘man first exists: he materialises in the world, encounters himself, and only afterward defines himself.’ I define myself. – Psyche

      • The Wrong Way To Criticize The Humanities

        This poorly argued case that it may be time to restrain the principles of academic freedom and faculty autonomy is not helping the situation. – Boston Review

      • Do We Have A Facts Problem Or An Interpretation-Of-Facts Problem?

        Citizens can agree on verifiable facts and still inhabit different worlds, because facts do not interpret themselves. To see why, we need to look beyond narrow factual disagreements to the competing systems of interpretation through which people select, categorize, frame, connect, explain, and narrate facts. – Persuasion

      • Why It’s So Difficult To Calculate Benefits And Costs Of Technology Innovation

        When a tool reliably performs a cognitive operation, the internal capacity for that operation tends to weaken with disuse. People who know they can look up something on Google develop weaker memory for the information itself, and habitual GPS users show measurable decline in hippocampal-dependent spatial navigation. – Aeon

      • Why Leisure Is A Tough Gig

        Give people an hour with nothing scheduled, and many fill it with thoughts of to-dos: the unanswered email, the errand that’s been put off, the project due next week. Free time is sometimes less a chance to rest than an opportunity to take inventory of our obligations. – The Atlantic

      WORDS