ArtsJournal Classic

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

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • The Kids Are Fine. Check On Grandpa.

      Good Morning,

      Every few years America convenes a panic about young people abandoning culture. Today’s stories suggest we’ve been watching the wrong generation. Since 2003, daily reading time among older Americans has nearly halved. BUT it’s the young whose reading habits are growing (New York Times). And they’re not just holding: Gen Z is choosing culture that puts bodies in rooms together, movie theaters included (New York Times), buying novels by the pallet because BookTok said so (New Yorker), and nursing a curious nostalgia for decades they never lived in (Big Think). The generation raised on screens turns out to be the one hungriest for what screens can’t deliver. That’s not a paradox, it’s a market opportunity.

      Governments, meanwhile, keep confirming culture’s power by trying to control it. Hong Kong authorities delivered an unsubtle warning to the city’s booksellers (AP), while the White House’s fixation on the Smithsonian’s version of American history is less about museums than about who gets to narrate the country (New York Times).

      Fitting, then, that a Warsaw exhibition argues the Surrealists were the original anti-fascists (ARTnews).

      All of our stories below.

    • Surrealists Were The Original Antifa

      “While Surrealism is figured as a style in popular imagination — trippy, dreamy, and escapist, detached from reality in every way — (the exhibition) ‘In the Very Bowels of Change: Surrealism and Antifascism’ reminds just how much the movement was formed in response to the politics of its time.” – Art in America

    • AI-Created Music – What We Can Learn From Copyright History

      AI can now generate songs, images, novels and artworks in seconds. Many of these works are already being streamed, licensed and sold. This raises an increasingly important question: should works produced without direct human authorship receive copyright protection? – The Conversation

    • How The Pedant Became A Stock Character In Theater

      Going all the way back to before 1600, the cantankerous, pompous, book-smart nincompoop has been a figure of mockery on European stages, a target for venting people’s dislike for know-it-all behavior. Some of the stereotypes associated with the character, however, were rather nasty. – The Public Domain Review

    • We Should Worry About How AI Might Change Us With Its Use

      How, then, could an automated oracle help? It cannot tell you what to feel, because feeling is not something you can summon by obedience. But neither can it settle the matter by telling you what to do. Reasons matter, and to be a morally responsible agent you must reason for yourself. – Humanist Review

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    • Why TikTok Has Become A Force In Book Buying

      One of the reasons TikTok’s book-review videos, known collectively as BookTok, have become so popular—and powerful in the publishing world—is that they offer a human-based, quasi-critical recommendation portal for fans and genre devotees to connect, commiserate, and promote their favorite work. – The New Yorker

    • Who’s Reading Less? It’s Older Americans, Not Younger

      In 2003, older Americans read on average just under an hour each day — 58.5 minutes. By last year, that had fallen nearly by half, to roughly 32.4 minutes each day, a drop that represents the lion’s share of overall reading declines. – The New York Times

    • Hong Kong Government Gives Ominous Warning To Booksellers

      “Hong Kong’s top security official said Thursday that booksellers should ensure the titles they sell do not harm national security, a day after five people linked to two bookstores were arrested. The police operation on Wednesday was the third round of arrests targeting independent bookstores within four months.” – AP

    • The Difference Between A Book And The Idea Of A Book

      There is the book a writer writes, which is to say the actual words on the page, and then there is what I call its hologram—the shimmering, ethereal version of the book that the author must pitch to their publisher, and which their publisher then pitches to the public. – LitHub

    • The Future Of Writing In The Age Of AI

      “It reminded me of what happened when the internet came of age and you saw a difference in the texture of novels: something about the research process that had become expansive and yet somehow just a little more hollow than the pre-internet novel.” – Yale Review

    PEOPLE

    • The Kids Are Fine. Check On Grandpa.

      Good Morning,

      Every few years America convenes a panic about young people abandoning culture. Today’s stories suggest we’ve been watching the wrong generation. Since 2003, daily reading time among older Americans has nearly halved. BUT it’s the young whose reading habits are growing (New York Times). And they’re not just holding: Gen Z is choosing culture that puts bodies in rooms together, movie theaters included (New York Times), buying novels by the pallet because BookTok said so (New Yorker), and nursing a curious nostalgia for decades they never lived in (Big Think). The generation raised on screens turns out to be the one hungriest for what screens can’t deliver. That’s not a paradox, it’s a market opportunity.

      Governments, meanwhile, keep confirming culture’s power by trying to control it. Hong Kong authorities delivered an unsubtle warning to the city’s booksellers (AP), while the White House’s fixation on the Smithsonian’s version of American history is less about museums than about who gets to narrate the country (New York Times).

      Fitting, then, that a Warsaw exhibition argues the Surrealists were the original anti-fascists (ARTnews).

      All of our stories below.

    • Surrealists Were The Original Antifa

      “While Surrealism is figured as a style in popular imagination — trippy, dreamy, and escapist, detached from reality in every way — (the exhibition) ‘In the Very Bowels of Change: Surrealism and Antifascism’ reminds just how much the movement was formed in response to the politics of its time.” – Art in America

    • AI-Created Music – What We Can Learn From Copyright History

      AI can now generate songs, images, novels and artworks in seconds. Many of these works are already being streamed, licensed and sold. This raises an increasingly important question: should works produced without direct human authorship receive copyright protection? – The Conversation

    • How The Pedant Became A Stock Character In Theater

      Going all the way back to before 1600, the cantankerous, pompous, book-smart nincompoop has been a figure of mockery on European stages, a target for venting people’s dislike for know-it-all behavior. Some of the stereotypes associated with the character, however, were rather nasty. – The Public Domain Review

    • We Should Worry About How AI Might Change Us With Its Use

      How, then, could an automated oracle help? It cannot tell you what to feel, because feeling is not something you can summon by obedience. But neither can it settle the matter by telling you what to do. Reasons matter, and to be a morally responsible agent you must reason for yourself. – Humanist Review

    PEOPLE

    • The Kids Are Fine. Check On Grandpa.

      Good Morning,

      Every few years America convenes a panic about young people abandoning culture. Today’s stories suggest we’ve been watching the wrong generation. Since 2003, daily reading time among older Americans has nearly halved. BUT it’s the young whose reading habits are growing (New York Times). And they’re not just holding: Gen Z is choosing culture that puts bodies in rooms together, movie theaters included (New York Times), buying novels by the pallet because BookTok said so (New Yorker), and nursing a curious nostalgia for decades they never lived in (Big Think). The generation raised on screens turns out to be the one hungriest for what screens can’t deliver. That’s not a paradox, it’s a market opportunity.

      Governments, meanwhile, keep confirming culture’s power by trying to control it. Hong Kong authorities delivered an unsubtle warning to the city’s booksellers (AP), while the White House’s fixation on the Smithsonian’s version of American history is less about museums than about who gets to narrate the country (New York Times).

      Fitting, then, that a Warsaw exhibition argues the Surrealists were the original anti-fascists (ARTnews).

      All of our stories below.

    • Surrealists Were The Original Antifa

      “While Surrealism is figured as a style in popular imagination — trippy, dreamy, and escapist, detached from reality in every way — (the exhibition) ‘In the Very Bowels of Change: Surrealism and Antifascism’ reminds just how much the movement was formed in response to the politics of its time.” – Art in America

    • AI-Created Music – What We Can Learn From Copyright History

      AI can now generate songs, images, novels and artworks in seconds. Many of these works are already being streamed, licensed and sold. This raises an increasingly important question: should works produced without direct human authorship receive copyright protection? – The Conversation

    • How The Pedant Became A Stock Character In Theater

      Going all the way back to before 1600, the cantankerous, pompous, book-smart nincompoop has been a figure of mockery on European stages, a target for venting people’s dislike for know-it-all behavior. Some of the stereotypes associated with the character, however, were rather nasty. – The Public Domain Review

    • We Should Worry About How AI Might Change Us With Its Use

      How, then, could an automated oracle help? It cannot tell you what to feel, because feeling is not something you can summon by obedience. But neither can it settle the matter by telling you what to do. Reasons matter, and to be a morally responsible agent you must reason for yourself. – Humanist Review

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS