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Issue 9 Winter 2024

Issue 9 Winter 2024

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See the full contents of Issue 9 (PDF file).

Front Cover

Susie Phillips, Red Poppies, 2022, Oil on paper, 19 x 19 in. Photo: Carol Hensley. Courtesy of the artist and Conduit Gallery

Sciences and Arts

The Quiet Dr. Einstein and the Forgotten Moral Heroes of World War I

Contrasted with the daring actions of Adler and Nicolai, Einstein’s early pacifism seems very appealing because it is similar to the low-level pacifist behaviors that many of us exhibit.Alberto Martinez and Tom Palaima · Issue 9 ·

Book of Earth

Ochre and earth pigment are situated at the nexus of huge elemental cycles, a gazillion years of outer space galaxy creation, a few billion years of geological and biological growth on (and of) Earth, and several hundred thousand recent years of human evolution.Lydia Pyne · Issue 9 ·

A Brief History of Emergence

Spiral galaxies, hydrothermal systems, animals, ecosystems, oceanic currents and tides, hurricanes, civilizations, political systems, economies, and war are some of the many examples of emergent phenomena, in which low-level rules give rise to higher-level complexity. Frederick Turner, Robert J. Stern, and Roger Malina · Issue 9 ·


Art Worlds

Picturing a Phenomenon

In terms of taste, Allan was the anti-Castelli. He loved what I call zaftig painting: lush, textured, juicy surfaces. Brian Allen · Issue 9 ·


A Trans-Atlantic Migration

Bois and his colleagues at October changed, for a few decades, the way that art historians dealing with modernism in America worked. David Carrier · Issue 9 ·

Time-Traveling with Line

The question of line depth and how it changes the viewer’s perception play out especially in the exhibition’s white gesso and clay reliefs. Lorraine Tady · Issue 9 ·

Literary Lives

Three Ballades by Christine de Pizan

Christine de Pizan (1364 – c. 1430) was the first woman in France, and possibly in Europe, known to have supported herself and her family by means of her writing. Maryann Corbett · Issue 9 ·

Four Sour and Stringent Proposals for the Novel

Valuing novels for the social information they contribute, as many literary prizes do, is like judging dogs for fetching.James Elkins · Issue 9 ·


Folio

Works of art by William Atkinson, Rosalyn Bodycomb, Sean Cairns, Susie Phillips, Carroll Swenson-Roberts, and Keer Tanchak

Download a PDF copy of the folio.

Musical Spheres

How the Musical Mind “Sees”

James Joyce held an interest for many composers during the middle to late 20th century, due to his frequent use of words for their musical or sonic nature rather than for their meaning.Daniel Asia · Issue 9 ·


Retelling the Story of American Music

Dvořák practiced what he preached, and the result was (in the view of many) the finest work of American classical music ever written. Nathan Jones · Issue 9 ·

Current Affairs

The Thin Crust of Civilization

The ability to see patterns is predictive of a strong belief in them, which can easily become a faith in the unseen workings of power.Diane Purkiss · Issue 9 ·

In the Land of Dreams

Whereas Dave Chappelle, in the eyes of some, appeared to make light of the Holocaust and seemed to lack an understanding of the ways in which many American Jews are still scarred by what our families endured in Europe in the 20th century, Armageddon Time conveys some of the gravity of the Jewish situation in early 20th century.Daniel Ross Goodman · Issue 9 ·


Africa Rising

Although Sub-Saharan Africa holds 60% of the world’s not-yet-cultivated arable land, food scarcity is a top concern, particularly in view of the worsening climate crisis.Meaghan Emery · Issue 9 ·