November 2003
“The power of self-criticism”
The Archbishop of Canterbury discovers the “serious moral goals” of terrorists.
The Archbishop of Canterbury discovers the “serious moral goals” of terrorists.
On Bloom’s endorsement of Wesley Clark in The Wall Street Journal.
On Frederick Kagan’s contribution to our series “Lengthened Shadows”
Frederick W. Kagan reflects on the transformation of the American military. The third if out series “Lengthened shadows: America and Its Institutions in the Twenty-first Century.”
William Godwin, Condorcet, and Malthus: Or, Why benevolence is bad for you.
Carl Jung was one of the great gurus of the twentieth century. Is he still worth reading?
An affectionate reappraisal of the D. J. Enright, the English poet and man of letters who died last year.
On Omnium Gatherum at the Variety Arts theater.
On “El Greco” at the Metroplitan Museum of Art.
On the new Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall, the New York Philharmonic, The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, The Met & Carnegie Hall, proper.
If outrage is a commodity, does it still outrage?
A review of Yellow Dog, by Martin Amis; And Now You Can Go, by Vendela Vida; The Effect of Living Backwards, by Heidi Julavits; The Furies, by Fernanda Eberstadt & The Fortress of Solitude, by Jonathan Lethem.
The President of St. John’s College reflects on the pertinence of Homer’s Iliad today..
If you are a subscriber and you have not received an issue, or if an issue arrived damaged, please call 800-783-4903 or 973-627-5162 within 90 days of issue date for a replacement copy.