ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

WORDS

How Poetry Can Aid Science

When done properly, poetry can help to make science more diverse, equitable, and inclusive. Not just as a box-ticking exercise because making sure all sorts of people engage with science. - The Conversation

Publishers Get Final Win In Suit Against Maryland’s Library E-Book Law

The statute required any publisher selling e-books in Maryland to make those e-books available to libraries "on reasonable terms."  The American Association of Publishers sued for an injunction blocking the law; that was granted, and Maryland’s attorney general has now decided not to appeal. - Publishers Weekly

Time To Do Away With The Scientific Paper?

This system comes with big problems. Chief among them is the issue of publication bias: reviewers and editors are more likely to give a scientific paper a good write-up and publish it in their journal if it reports positive or exciting results. So scientists go to great lengths to hype up their studies. - The Guardian

Are You Gaslighting, Correctly?

Although in most cases the word serves to expose implicit power dynamics and level the playing field, it can also be used to do the exact opposite. - The Atlantic

A Look At The International Booker Prize Shortlist

Of the six books now in contention for the prestigious translated fiction award, five were written by women, with three translated by women too. - The Guardian

Libraries Around The World Are Helping To Save Ukrainian Culture

Today, teams of archivists and librarians are working to save Ukrainian library and museum collections. Their efforts echo the work of the Monuments Men who, during the Second World War, gave “first aid to art and books” and engaged in the recovery of cultural materials. - The Conversation

How Book Customers Browse For Books

To create a space that is intentional in its gathering of materials meant to provide intellectual and literary stimulation, a space wholly devoted to books, be it a bookstore, a library, or a personal collection, is to understand the fulfillment provided by the activity of rumination and reflection. - Slate

The New New Thing: Video Game Book Clubs

Unlike many "real" book clubs and video game podcasts, they're less interested in new releases—focusing instead on detailed analysis of popular retro titles. - Wired

The Art Of Buying Books You Haven’t Read To Decorate Your Room

It turns out the bookshelf bulk-buy is standard practice among the rich and famous – and increasingly so, since books have become established as an erudite backdrop for Zoom. - The Guardian

Swahili — How A Little Coastal Dialect Became Africa’s Most Widely Spoken Language

Native to the East African coast, Swahili developed as a lingua franca for various nationalities doing business in busy ports like Zanzibar. Now Swahili is spoken, written, read, and broadcast across a huge swath of the continent by 200 million people, for most of whom it's a second language. - Quartz

Le Monde Launches An English-Language Version

"The leading French daily, with 425,000 digital subscribers to date, plans to reach 1 million paying readers in the next two to three years, with a quarter of them reading the (online) English version, Le Monde's chairman said this week." - Bloomberg Quint

When Crosswords Became A Craze (100 Years Ago)

The modern “word-cross” appeared for the first time in print in the December 21, 1913 edition of New York World’s FUN Supplement. Section editor Arthur Wynne, trying to fill the Christmas insert, drew inspiration from his native England. - Zocalo Public Square

The Mythologies Of The Writer’s Blank Page

If all works of literature are haunted by the ideal forms of which they are but imperfect instantiations, then the blank book symbolises the refusal to compromise authorial vision. - Aeon

Rags-To-Riches Stories Reveal More About America Than Their Authors Think

From the Horatio Alger stories which launched the genre to memoirs by billionaires and even to Fifty Shades of Grey and other "billionaire romance" books (an actual category at Amazon), rags-to-riches narratives demonstrate that financial success is not, in fact, due to hard work alone. - The New York Times Magazine

The Carpet Cleaner Who Speaks 24 Languages

By his count, it is actually 37 more languages, with at least 24 he speaks well enough to carry on lengthy conversations. He can read and write in eight alphabets and scripts. He can tell stories in Italian and Finnish and American Sign Language. - Washington Post

Our Free Newsletter

Join our 30,000 subscribers

Latest

Don't Miss

function my_excerpt_length($length){ return 200; } add_filter('excerpt_length', 'my_excerpt_length');