‘Intensely Southern and Only Faintly Jewish’
Nicholas Lemann recalls an unusual and sometimes unsettling family history—his own.

Nicholas Lemann recalls an unusual and sometimes unsettling family history—his own.

In a sense, the decline of book reviews, like the decline of newspapers themselves, is a story about disaggregation.

Even in ancient Greece, people worried about philosophy’s subversive effect on tender minds.

Being a reader means cultivating a relationship with the world that, by most standards, can seem pointless and counterproductive.

Humans love to imagine their own demise.

The rise of an academic theory and its obsession with Israel

The close passing of the poetry critics Marjorie Perloff and Helen Vendler is a moment to recognize the end of an era.

A novelist transforms the physicist John von Neumann into a scientific demon.

A disparate group of thinkers says we should welcome our demise.

A court battle between German and Israeli archives over his manuscripts raised literary, not just legal, questions.
