Critics, Enemies, and the Difference
by Francis X. MaierCritics are not always enemies. Some speak out of love, even when their words are heated. Continue Reading »
Critics are not always enemies. Some speak out of love, even when their words are heated. Continue Reading »
Last year marked the thirtieth anniversary of Dana Gioia’s Can Poetry Matter?, a follow-up to his famous 1991 article in The Atlantic. The article and book caused quite a stir. Gioia observed that poetry was no longer a part of intellectual life in America. It was not published in . . . . Continue Reading »
Bad reviews killed the poet Keats, so the story goes. Even though the tale has been debunked, it remains popularly repeated. We enjoy the éclat of unjust criticism, especially of the famous, even as we relish pitying the weakness of the oversensitive. The great film director Akira . . . . Continue Reading »
To seek publication is to seek to be judged. It is to learn, finally, what kind of writer one is (or is not) meant to be. Continue Reading »
A list of some of the most perceptive cultural critics of the last two centuries. Continue Reading »
The Claremont Review of Books has granted First Things readers free access to Mark Bauerlein's latest essay. Continue Reading »
The Bible in a Disenchanted Age: The Enduring Possibility of Christian Faith by r. w. l. moberly baker, 240 pages, $24.99 The Book of the People: How to Read the Bible by a. n. wilson harper, 224 pages, $26.99 The Bible and the Believer: How to Read the Bible Critically & . . . . Continue Reading »
What follows is a historical footnote on the Catholic fiction debate.
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After being displaced by detachment and suspicion, aesthetic pleasure may be making a comeback in criticism. Continue Reading »
What do we do with—or, more accurately, without—that strange breed of writer, the literary critic? Continue Reading »