The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day

TODAY: In 1984, Michel Foucault dies.
- Ellen O’Connell Whittet looks at the long life of Marina Abramović’s creative career. | Lit Hub Art
- “At the heart of its culinary philosophy is the belief that people are within and part of their ecosystem, not separate from it.” On amaranth and the history and legacy of Pueblo cuisine in New Mexico. | Lit Hub Food
- How incorporating multiple perspectives to explore shared memory can craft a complex family story. | Lit Hub Craft
- Sarah Boon examines the necessity of field research and the 19th-century women who fed her passion for the natural world. | Lit Hub Nature
- Marc Raimondi on Terry Bollea, Hulk Hogan, and the McDonalds-esque appeal of professional wrestling in America. | Lit Hub Sports
- David Litt considers the challenges and joys of learning to surf as an adult: “While flailing in pursuit of whitewater may not have been fun, it was something different to think about.” | Lit Hub Memoir
- “Emerson had kissed his wife when he came in, which was the right thing to do.” Read from Hal Ebbott’s new novel, Among Friends. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Anthony Madrid considers the perils of writing ghazals in English. | The Paris Review
- “Utopianism has never been the fatal flaw of the left. What truly undermines its capacity for political realism is this belief in the saving power of catastrophe.” Corey Robin on the murky idea of “late capitalism.” | New Left Review
- What Anthropic’s AI copyright case means for books. | Wired
- If you’re tired of hearing about writing and AI, try reading an art and literature zine hosted on the ancient (but still functional) protocol Telnet. | 404 Media
- “It is true that Airless Spaces is closer to a diary than a polemic or a war plan, that Firestone’s politics surface explicitly only in minor swells.” Emmeline Clein on Shulamith Firestone. | Los Angeles Review of Books
- Julie Stone Peters considers Trump, the law, and a bad courtroom movie. | Public Books
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