He was born in Moscow in 1932; he died in Munich, his adopted home. His wife, who preceded him in death, was Maya Plisetskaya ...
The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s renovated Michael C. Rockefeller Wing is astonishing, frightening, and baffling—and that’s more a reflection of the curator ...
Max Sligh on “Maurice Ravel,” by Emily Kilpatrick.
One is grimly amused to read that “the writings of Burke are the daily bread of statesmen, speakers, and political writers.” Granted that only eighty years had passed since Burke’s death, still there ...
It’s not too late for the republic to listen.
Show AllShow ArticlesShow DispatchShow TNC+ MultimediaAll Authors, , Abel, LionelAbowitz, RichardAdams, HarryAdams, J. ChristianAdams, Michael VannoyAgee, William C ...
A nd new philosophy calls all in doubt . . . ’Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone.” ...
As Liza Libes, a veteran of Literature Humanities, recently wrote, more in sorrow than in anger, “Ovid was sent on a ...
We would invite the senator to ponder the phrase “unalienable rights.” What makes such rights “unalienable” in his view?
Imagine that you are a young man from a loving home and good family, brought up to be well-mannered, always considerate of ...
Currently, Muslims account for about 6.5 percent of Britain’s population. That may seem like a small number. But there are ...
Simon Heffer on a pair of new books about London’s clubs.
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