ArtsJournal Classic

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

DANCE

    IDEAS

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    • One Of The World’s Major Collections Of Banned Russian Literature Is In Manhattan

      “The Tamizdat Project is the brainchild of Yakov Klots, a soft-spoken, unassuming literary scholar who teaches at Hunter College. He chose the name from a Russian word meaning ‘published abroad,’ which, along with samizdat (‘to self-publish’), was one of the two main methods of evading Soviet book censorship.” – The New York Times

    • Does Counting The Books You Read Kill The Pleasure?

      As reading is increasingly tracked and performed online, there is a growing sense that a solitary pleasure is being reshaped by the logic of metrics and visibility. – The Guardian

    • What Happens When Writing Becomes Easy?

      The advent of the chatbot raised an unsettling question: What if writing didn’t have to be hard? What if that noble ordeal was no more necessary than going to a well to fetch your water when you could just turn on a tap? – The Atlantic

    • Why Is Nearly Everyone Reading Fantasy These Days?

      “The strictly disenchanted world, where nothing exists but physical processes describable without metaphor, and even consciousness is just a material problem waiting to be solved, can be a desiccated place. It keeps heart and mind on inadequate rations.” – The Guardian (UK)

    • Toni Morrison, And The Power Of Ambiguity

      “Fiction has no obligation to dispel ambiguity. It can make use of it—even intensify it—in order to evoke and transform experience. In Beloved, Morrison does take possession of the master’s tools, but she bends them, breaks them, and then uses them to reshape the house.” – LitHub

    PEOPLE

    PEOPLE

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS