Plus: Toxic Metals, Toxic People; The Second Nakba; Sheila Heti; University Rights Now!
Our July 24 issue is now online, with Joyce Carol Oates on serial killers and toxic metals, Fintan O’Toole on Trump’s domestic army, David Shulman on the second Nakba, Regina Marler on the Brothers Grimm, Michelle Nijhuis on what we save, Peter Canby on the murder of a priest, Ruth Bernard Yeazell on Albert Barnes’s art sense, Ian Johnson on Xi père, Lola Seaton on Sheila Heti’s deceptive ease, James Gleick on AI nonsense, poems by Milan Děžinský and Devon Walker-Figueroa, and much more. The artificial intelligence industry depends on plagiarism, mimicry, and exploited labor, not intelligence. Engineering a second Nakba and annexing the occupied territories are integral parts of Netanyahu’s war against the State of Israel’s democratic institutions, its social solidarity, and above all the rule of law. In Murderland, Caroline Fraser traces the correlations between rapacious industrial pollution and sadistic serial killers. The illusion of effortlessness is a major source of the pleasure of Sheila Heti’s work: it makes us feel as though we could capture the world as easily. Most recently in a flimsy report on antisemitism at Harvard, the Trump administration has been weaponizing discrimination claims to remake the country’s universities. How can they fight back? Save $168 on an inspired pairing! Get both The New York Review and The Paris Review at one low price. You are receiving this message because you signed up for email newsletters from The New York Review. The New York Review of Books 207 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016-6305 |
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