A Lakota Playwright’s Take on Thanksgiving

“The Thanksgiving Play” is a comedy on an awkward subject, and a sendup of liberal good intentions. The staff writer Vinson Cunningham speaks with the playwright Larissa FastHorse.

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Categorised as Culture

Can Shostakovich Ever Escape Stalin’s Shadow?

Endless debate over whether the ending of the composer’s Fifth Symphony represents a capitulation to Soviet demands or a secret dissent obscures a more tantalizing possibility.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

Frank Auerbach’s Raw Truths

“I find it all very difficult,” the late German-born British artist said, and few painters have done as much to show the struggle of creative endeavor.

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Categorised as Culture

The Fantasy of Cozy Tech

From the “cozy gaming” trend to a new generation of A.I. companions, our devices are trying to swathe us in a digital and physical cocoon.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

Why Do We Talk This Way?

Technology is dramatically changing political speech, rewarding quantity and variety over the neat messages of the past.

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Categorised as Culture

Briefly Noted

“Women’s Hotel,” “Under the Eye of the Big Bird,” “By the Fire We Carry,” and “Alexander von Humboldt.”

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Categorised as Culture

Bearing Witness to American Exploits

Peter van Agtmael’s images of war and domestic strife are arresting and almost cinematically spare, but it is the careful narrative arc of his new book, “Look at the U.S.A.,” that deepens the viewer’s experience.

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Categorised as Culture

How R.E.M. Created Alternative Music

In the cultural wasteland of the Reagan era, they showed that a band could break through to mass appeal without being cheesy, or nostalgic, or playing hair metal.

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Categorised as Culture

Restaurant Review: Bridges

Bridges, a chic new restaurant from a former Estela chef, offers indulgence through restraint, with eye-opening results.

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Categorised as Culture

Ryan Murphy’s Latest Era of Cynical Hits

In “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story,” the astoundingly prolific showrunner melds his modes as provocateur and clumsy social-justice warrior, with mixed results.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture