The Mercurial Bob Dylan
by Eddie LaRowDylan did more than preserve America’s rich folk heritage. He transformed it. Continue Reading »
Dylan did more than preserve America’s rich folk heritage. He transformed it. Continue Reading »
Religion does not poison everything, and it is the absence of Christianity that has created a civilizational crisis. Continue Reading »
Taylor Swift invokes marriage as the ultimate symbol of enduring love and commitment on her eleventh studio album. Continue Reading »
In declaring that it is inappropriate for a straight actor to play a gay man on screen, Hanks negates the importance of the shared humanity that makes him empathetic in the first place. Continue Reading »
Commitment makes Maverick the oldest and truest type of Naval officer; the oldest and truest type of American; and finally, the oldest and truest type of man. Continue Reading »
Despite its noir trappings and deeply dysfunctional Gotham, The Batman shows its protagonist growing in a way few other portrayals have. Continue Reading »
As his latest album demonstrates, a subset of Sting’s songs reverberates with the legacy of an urban English Catholic childhood of the 1950s and ’60s. Continue Reading »
Modern people, despite being drawn to medieval aesthetics and artificats, cannot seem to bear to examine what those artifacts are modeled on: the intelligible order glimpsed by the eye of faith. Continue Reading »
The moral shelf life of pop cultural artifacts seems much shorter than ever before, and the criteria by which they might be judged far less predictable. Continue Reading »
We asked some of our writers to contribute a paragraph or two about the most memorable movies and TV shows they saw this year.
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