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36 stories from The Atlantic

When Meanness Was Celebrated by Shirley Li

For decades, the media have chronicled a Hollywood mega-producer's reputation as a bully"and even praised him for it.

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 1:29pm on April 10, 2021

Broadway's Dirty Secret by Helen Lewis

Ivo Van Hove's success shows how much American commercial theater relies on European state funding.

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 8:14am on November 10, 2019

How AI Might Make The Vatican's Amazing Archives Accessible by Artsjournal

The Vatican Secret Archive isn't much use to modern scholars, because it's so inaccessible. Of those 53 miles, just a few millimeters' worth of pages have been scanned and made available onl…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 6:33pm on April 30, 2018

A New Institute To Study Failure by Artsjournal

Research on failure as a motivator is limited, though the evidence that does exist suggests that students can grow both from learning about the failures of other successful people and from e…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 5:12pm on April 27, 2018

Marvel's Avengers Movies Have Begun Subverting Their Own Ideas About Superheroism by Artsjournal1

"After kicking things off with stirring origin movies like Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America: The First Avenger, the series has gradually started to examine the shaky underpinnings of its …

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 1:36pm on April 26, 2018

How Did Dance Tutus Become Runner Chic? by Artsjournal

I've run a handful of races per year since my first 5K in 2008, and have done enough theme/costume runs to be used to seeing women (and occasionally men) in fluffy statement skirts"sometimes…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 6:18pm on April 24, 2018

For The First Time In Years A Trove Of Books, Music, Films Will Enter Public Domain by Artsjournal

It's the first time since 1998 for a mass shift to the public domain of material protected under copyright. It's also the beginning of a new annual tradition: For several decades from 2019 o…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 12:54pm on April 24, 2018

How The Pulitzer Committee Chose Kendrick Lamar For Music by Artsjournal2

Violinist and Pulitzer jury member Regina Carter: "I just sat down and it was like wow. I just felt like what he had to say and how he would say it, you had to really sit down and think abou…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 12:54pm on April 22, 2018

Philip Glass Talks About His Life In Music by Artsjournal

When I do concerts I often give talks to students. They get them together, and I talk to them in the afternoon, and we talk about music. Not too long ago one young fellow, he said, "Tell me …

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 5:42pm on April 20, 2018

Is The College Experience Converging With The Retail Shopping Experience? by Artsjournal

As online learning extends its reach, though, it is starting to run into a major obstacle: There are undeniable advantages, as traditional colleges have long known, to learning in a shared p…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 3:36pm on April 17, 2018

Future V. Past: The Stakes In The Netflix V. Cannes Battle by Artsjournal

By putting its movies online immediately, the streaming service represents an existential threat to the French theater industry's business; the Cannes rule change is just the latter's mode o…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 6:54pm on April 16, 2018

Regulators Want To Know How Elite Colleges Choose Who Gets In. They Might Not Like The Answers by Artsjournal

Outsiders have long been curious how admissions decisions are made. Most of the time this desire for transparency stems from a desire for fairness: Given how few acceptances elite institutio…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 11:31am on April 12, 2018

The Entire Idea Of 'VARK' Learning Styles Seems To Be A Myth by Artsjournal1

"VARK, which stands for 'Visual, Auditory, Reading, and Kinesthetic,' sorts students into those who learn best visually, through aural or heard information, through reading, or through 'kine…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 11:03am on April 12, 2018

Cecil Taylor's 'Challenging' Avant-Garde Jazz Was More Accessible Than (Some) People Think by Artsjournal1

"Consider the reaction of another listener: Jimmy Carter. In 1978, the president, not renowned as an especially sophisticated jazz listener, hosted a jazz festival at the White House. Most o…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 10:05am on April 11, 2018

Video Can Now Be Convincingly Faked. Seeing Is No Longer Believing (Now What?) by Artsjournal

Manipulated video will ultimately destroy faith in our strongest remaining tether to the idea of common reality. As Ian Goodfellow, a scientist at Google, told MIT Technology Review, "It'…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 4:25pm on April 9, 2018

Scientific Papers Have Become Obsolete by Artsjournal

"The more sophisticated science becomes, the harder it is to communicate results. Papers today are longer than ever and full of jargon and symbols. They depend on chains of computer programs…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 1:29pm on April 5, 2018

The Revival Of 'Roseanne' Has Split The American Left by Artsjournal1

Emblemizing the split are author Roxane Gay ("[the show is] further normalizing Trump and his warped, harmful political ideologies") and comedian Sarah Silverman ("I like that Trumpers will …

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 10:36am on April 5, 2018

Absolute Truths: The Lie Detector In The Age Of Alternative Facts by Artsjournal

Geoffrey C. Bunn argues that the history of the lie detector doubles as the history of an attempt to contend with the rise of mass culture: the machine, as a manifestation of a widespread de…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 4:29pm on April 3, 2018

Why Did Wes Anderson Set 'Isle Of Dogs' In Japan, Anyway? by Artsjournal1

Nina Li Coomes: "In the film, the country is a plot device that creates a vague sense of unfamiliarity to move the story forward and explain away bizarre narrative elements. ... [In other wo…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 10:05am on April 3, 2018

The New Netflix Show About A Cult Really Gets At The Heart Of Religious Freedom In The U.S., And Maybe The Current President As Well by Artsjournal2

Sure, the First Amendment prohibits the government from making a law "respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," but current case law on religious fr…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 7:30am on April 2, 2018

The Egyptian President's War On The Arts, Journalists, And Dissent by Artsjournal

Since he took power from the Muslim Brotherhood in a coup in 2013, the number of journalists and activists in jail has spiked as dissent against his regime has been roundly crushed; ma…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 5:32pm on March 26, 2018

The Best-Foreign-Language-Film Oscar Has Already Affected Politics In The Country That Won It by Artsjournal1

The award to A Fantastic Woman, about a transgender waitress dealing with the death of her partner, "has been enough to rekindle debate over a gender-identity bill that had been lagging in C…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 11:03am on March 15, 2018

Why Nazi-Looted Art Has Never Really Been Resolved by Artsjournal

The feverish nature of the art market during the Second World War, and ever since, offers at least one straightforward reason for both the Nazi art theft itself and for why items have never …

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 12:42pm on March 12, 2018

New Study Delivers Deeply Depressing News About Spread Of Fake News

The massive new study analyzes every major contested news story in English across the span of Twitter's existence"some 126,000 stories, tweeted by 3 million users, over more than 10 years"an…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 6:01pm on March 9, 2018

How AI Took Over A Community Of Knitters

"The knitting project has been a particularly fun one so far just because it ended up being a dialogue between this computer program and these knitters that went over my head in a lot of way…

SOURCE: The Atlantic Subscription at 3:01pm on March 7, 2018
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