Carl Miller, the author of The Death of the Gods, which deals with how power works and who holds it in the digital age, sheds light on how algorithms, originally devised as simple problem-solving devices, have become so complicated that no one, not even their creators, can control them; Kristen Roupenian points out the problem with an “unfailingly enthusiastic” compendium of twentieth-century female intellectuals (including Dorothy Parker and Joan Didion): who is left out and why?; eighty-odd years ago, Zora Neale Hurston, now best known for her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, interviewed Kossola O-Lo-Loo-Ay, the last known survivor of the Atlantic Slave Trade. As her book is finally published, Colin Grant joins us to tell us more
Books
The Death of the Gods: The new global power grab by Carl Miller
Sharp: The women who made an art of having an opinion by Michelle Dean
Barracoon: The story of the last “Black Cargo” by Zora Neale
Don't sweat it
Indexes, Newsletters, Potatoes, Gold!
TLS Summer Library: Part IV
TLS Summer Library: Part III
The Guidance of Brains
TLS Summer Library: Part II
TLS Summer Library: Part I
Turning poetry into profit with Alighieri Jewellery's Rosh Mahtani
Paternal Effects
A Genius of Cancer and a Queen of Bohemia
The Miraculous Mundane
Private Profits, Public Cost
The movie we want it to be
Insiders, outsiders and insider-outsiders
No Ideas, But in Things
Proust's Way
Strange Worlds of Their Own
Robots Working, Humans Reading
Mozart the Happy Harlequin and Lost British Labourism
A Bengali Polymath and an ‘Accidental Modernist’
Create your
podcast in
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It is Free
The Modern West
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL