Oldest and far the richest among American universities, Harvard is the apex, in some sense, of American intellectualism, and it will be a long time figuring out just how it lost a big game it didn’t seem to know it was playing: a high-stakes free for all, it turned out to be, with poisonous words like plagiarism and anti-Semitism threaded through the media coverage and then in airborne ad banners and other blunt instruments.
Diana Eck and Randall Kennedy.
Suddenly, the president of Harvard—a black woman, as chance would have it—resigned her job under pressure, as if to confirm that something serious had indeed happened. But what in the world was the Harvard fight about? And was this the beginning or the end of a great battle?
Campus Uproar
American Disorder
Lessons from Hannah Arendt
Taylor Swift’s Tortured Poets
Of Melville and Marriage
Against Despair
The Rebel’s Clinic
Algorithmic Anxiety
The Most Secret Memory of Men
The Revolutionary
Israel and Palestine Across History
Time’s Echo
Chas Freeman on a Kaleidoscopic Turn
Upended Assumptions
War and Dread
George Eliot’s Marriage Story
Zadie Smith on The Fraud
Henry at Work
The Cosmic Scholar
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It is Free
Postcards from China
Grimms’ Fairy Tales
The Turn of the Screw
The Money Machine