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Issue 8 Spring 2023

Issue 8 Spring 2023

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Front Cover

Special Issue: The Future of the Humanities

The Future of the Humanities and the Specter of Antisemitism

According to the sages, God begins with one and not two, so that no one can say to another, “My side of the family is better than your side of the family”: there is only one side of the human family, with all the ethical obligations that come to bear in being part of the human family. David Patterson · Issue 8 ·

Can the Humanities Flourish in Prison?

After a Shakespeare performance class in prison, it is about going to bed with, not sugar plums dancing in your head, but with an iambic rhythm that echoes through the night against the blare of a loudspeaker that rarely quietens amidst the bright lights outside your cell that never dim. Karen Hamer and Cedric Martin · Issue 8 ·

Expertise and Education

If one is willing to dwell on the difficulty, to be unsettled and challenged by it, one can develop a flexibility, a stamina, an imagination of thought. Jordan Poyner · Issue 8 ·

The Art of Conversation and the Revival of the Humanities

Montaigne’s comparative method encourages a complex mixture of appreciation of the many ways human beings live their lives, modesty about one’s dispositions and accomplishments, and the free but unpresumptuous exercise of individual judgment about the whole.Benjamin Storey · Issue 8 ·

Rage against the University Machine

As far back as 62 BC, the Roman statesman, philosopher, and orator Cicero had announced that the studia humanitatis (“the studies of humanity”) were valuable because they instilled the crucial quality of humanitas (“benevolence,” “kindliness,” “humaneness”) in their devotees. Eric Adler · Issue 8 ·

Form Fatigue

For the Yup’ik of Alaska, objects and human experiences constituted a complex and unified worldview inextricably weaving together the material, spiritual, and personal. Thomas Riccio · Issue 8 ·

From STEM to STEAM

Science fiction has the benefits of both worlds—those of sciences and humanities, and its popularity among the reading public is the consequence of both technological advancement and the innate drives of the human desire to control one’s world and destiny in the postmodern and posthuman age of media and telecommunications. Ming Dong Gu · Issue 8 ·

A New Horizon for the Study of the Arts and Humanities

The original work will not change and does not have to change in order to maintain its power, whereas the translation needs to be revitalized as the cultural and social standards and energies of each century change.Rainer Schulte · Issue 8 ·

Dark Posthumanism and the Novel

What updates are required of the novel — a technology allegedly designed as a vehicle of liberal humanism — in the era of dark posthumanism? Erin Greer · Issue 8 ·

Insider Exile

Melville’s narrator is someone whose secular critique is just strong enough to needle the professional class but too weak to do more than lament the plight of labor. Ashley Barnes · Issue 8 ·


Maps of Meaning

The People’s Choice

The fatal weakness in social contract theories is that no one remembers ever making such a contract.Al Martinich and Tom Palaima · Issue 8 ·

The Subjunctive Grammar of Hope

Not only may past and future be discovered within the present, but that our only access to future, or to past, is within the fleeting moment of the present.Paul Strohm · Issue 8 ·


Sciences and Arts

Transcending Barriers

Rare Earth pairs works of Chinese art from the Crow Museum’s permanent collection with connoisseur-level samples of raw minerals from China.Jacqueline Chao, Dennis M. Kratz, Robert J. Stern, and Robert Lavinsky · Issue 8 ·

Techno-Wizardry and the De-extinction of Celia the Ibex

On a cold and misty January 6, 2000, a fir tree in the Ordesa valley of the Spanish Pyrenees fell to the forest floor, crushing the last known individual of Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica—an ibex species that had been endemic the mountain range between Spain and France since the late Pleistocene. Lydia Pyne · Issue 8 ·


Folio

Literary Lives

Joel Barlow’s Eccentric American Vision

Barlow believed that “Science and republican progress, coupled with religion and the growing humanity of man, portended the millennium, which he believed would take place on earth before the second coming of God.” Ed Simon · Issue 8 ·


God’s Friends

Sigrid Undset, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1928, is without question one of Norway’s most famous and influential novelists.Natalie M. Van Deusen · Issue 8 ·

The Past is Present

“My Side of the Line”

By this definition, heroic and inspirational characters such as Batman and Spider-Man, among many others, are all vigilantes, but, on the other hand, so are the vigilantes who comprised the mob that stormed the Capitol, and the Punisher seems closer in his methodology to these real-life vigilantes.Peter Jay Ingrao · Issue 8 ·


Art Worlds

On the Multipart Works of John Wilcox

An artwork became another object in Wilcox’s world—like a fossil picked up on a walk, a phrase clipped from a newspaper, or the shape of a radio or transmission tower—whose meaning could be made and remade through ever-shifting relations with other objects to form a new whole.Sarah K. Kozlowski · Issue 8 ·

Mark and Dot

While their careers took vastly differing paths—Tworkov had the mark and Kusama had the dot—their philosophical and gestural strategies ran in parallel, sharing a skepticism of prevailing aesthetic orthodoxies. Jason Andrew · Issue 8 ·


A State of Speechless Wonder and Awe

For Adams, beauty is “a synonym for coherence and structure underlying life… beauty is the overriding demonstration of pattern that one observes.” Daniel Asia · Issue 8 ·