26 Jul A Critique of Racial Inequality in Shakespeare’s TITUS ANDRONICUS
By Aditi Parikh: Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, a tragedy likely written in late 1593 and set in ancient Rome, is a meditation on early modern race...
By Aditi Parikh: Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, a tragedy likely written in late 1593 and set in ancient Rome, is a meditation on early modern race...
By Megan Cole: It’s a truism for Octavia Butler fans: the postapocalyptic California landscape of her landmark Parable of the Sower (1993) is nearly indistinguishable...
By Thomas J. Sojka: The 2020s have arrived, bringing sensational headlines on the state of the global economy that anticipate “another Roaring Twenties” or condemn...
By Adrienne Sockwell: As a historian, and as a person interested in most narratives of the past, I realize the unique value of Ancestry.com as...
By Rebecca Lipperini: I love the supermarket — fiercely, obsessively, weirdly. I go to the supermarket when I feel overwhelmed. And it turns out I’m...
By Carly Lewis: “Rock and Roll Never Dies!” From buskers on La Via del Corso to Eurovision winners, Måneskin shows what it means to earn...
By Julissa Guerrero Iniguez: Euphoria debuted on HBO in 2019, meeting with almost universal critical acclaim. The show is a teen drama that explicitly confronts...
By Marissa Mika: For years, we had cats. Gigantic rescue cats, retrieved from a Philadelphia parking lot when they were only a pair of gray...
By Ksenia Firsova: Ursula K. Le Guin called for science-fiction writers to use their power of imagination to envision a world no longer constricted by...
By Arielle Stambler: Literary study offers an opportunity to suspend disbelief, to imagine the world not as it is, but as it could be...