The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day

TODAY: In 1817, Henry David Thoreau is born.
- “I didn’t care how I was represented, as long as I was on TV.” Sarah Hartshorne on surviving the horrors (of America’s Next Top Model). | Lit Hub TV
- How stoned was Shakespeare when he wrote Hamlet? Sam Kelly investigates. | Lit Hub History
- “Language-switching says something about Billy Parham’s ancestry, upbringing and his ability to survive.” Rachel Ashcroft meditates on the joys of reading books in multiple languages. | Lit Hub Criticism
- Peter Balakian on the lessons modern readers can learn from Richard Hofstadter’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1964 book, Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. | Lit Hub Politics
- “To most of us, that Carlyle was so beloved by the leader of the Nazi party is, at the least, a questionable mark against the Victorian thinker.” On Hitler, Curtis Yarvin, and why the far right loves reading Thomas Carlyle. | Public Books
- Wells Tower has found your luggage. | The Cut
- Professor Marcia Bjornerud explains time literacy (and wants you to pay more attention to rocks). | Atmos
- Mary Jo Bang on the importance of vernacular when translating Dante’s Paradiso to English. | Asymptote
- “In such stories, crabs are a symbol of efficient, brutal evolution at its simplest.” Will humans evolve into crabs? Michael Garfield explains. | Aeon
- How can design move forward as a field? Maybe it needs some literary inspiration. | The MIT Press Reader
- “Kesey was a divine fool, an unwitting figure in a conservative revolution.” Nick Burns on the reissue of Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. | The Nation
- Tired: naming a city after a dead colonizer. Wired: naming a city after “the vengeful ghost of a woman.” | JSTOR Daily
- How media is trying to survive the “traffic apocalypse” (and this time, it’s not pivot to video). | New York Magazine
- Yooj Chun explores what it means to read Han Kang during political crisis in South Korea. | Public Books
- Tegan O’Neil takes you inside the 1982 DC Comics style guide. | The Comics Journal
- Chloe Garcia Roberts interviews the late Fanny Howe: “Generally, I wouldn’t want to be trapped with other writers, ever.” | The Paris Review
- “A strong model for the opportunity Danielewski saw in this burgeoning TV phenomenon might be the story of how Family Guy took off.” Alexander Sorondo on Mark Z. Danielewski’s unfinished novel. | The Metropolitan Review
- Why the technology behind the slop clogging your feeds is also the technology of war. | The Baffler
- On Roland Barthes’ essay “The World of Wrestling” and the kayfabe of American politics. | Los Angeles Review of Books
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