Bodies That Flow
A new exhibition at the Dulwich Picture Gallery shows that conservatism has had no more articulate advocate than Peter Paul Rubens.
January 18, 2024 issue
How To Film A City
In his series for HBO, John Wilson obsessively catalogued footage of New York and its oddballs.
January 10, 2024
Even as a Ghost
In their new novels, V. V. Ganeshananthan and Shehan Karunatilaka use the “distance of time” to dramatize large chunks, if not the whole, of Sri Lanka’s recent past.
January 18, 2024 issue
New Money
In the late Middle Ages, an emergent merchant class was forced into both a social and spiritual reckoning.
January 7, 2024
The Discovery of Europe
A new book investigates the lives of the hundreds of thousands of indigenous Americans who were brought to or traveled to Europe in the sixteenth century—a story central to the beginning of globalization.
January 18, 2024 issue
Remembering Joan Acocella
Free from the Archives
Christopher Hill: Tiptoe Through the Tudors“At Calais the Lisles had access to a wider range of commodities: French wines for everybody, a merlin and a porpoise for Cromwell, a live seal for the Lord Admiral, sprats when they were out of season in England, storks for the Prior of Christ Church. Lady Lisle was given a dozen puffins, as well as marmosets and a long-tailed monkey from Brazil offered by a French diplomat.”
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