Essays

1093 results
Page 101
1031 Bauhaus Dessau

Discovering Dessau

Dessau had its moment of glory as the home of Walter Gropius’s Bauhaus in the 1920s. But this East German city today remains is a very modern city with great medieval credentials.
Patrick D. Hazard

Patrick D. Hazard

Essays 5 minute read
Czech Republic's Katerina Emmons: A hero in her country.

Olympic (and artistic) geeks

The geeks of Beijing Let us now praise the obscure sports

Once every four years, table tennis sharks and air rifle sharpshooters emerge from obscurity and become the standard bearers of mighty nations, just as great writers emerge from obscurity every four years or so with a new book. The true spirit of the Olympics is the force that has shaped much of the modern world: the relentless drive of the obsessive-compulsive personality.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Essays 5 minute read
1022 vermeer

Home design: My ideal kitchen

The kitchen has become the social center of the American home. But most designs fail to satisfy homeowners’ yearning for beauty, relaxation and personal identity. Why not take a lesson from those 17th-Century Dutch kitchens celebrated by Rembrandt and Vermeer?
Caroline Dunlop Millett

Caroline Dunlop Millett

Essays 5 minute read
1023 reykjavik

Letter from Iceland

Can Broad Street Review’s irrepressible octogenarian curmudgeon cheapskate professor survive a week alone in Iceland? Does a bear sleep in the woods? And if he can make Reykjavik into Paris, why not you?
Patrick D. Hazard

Patrick D. Hazard

Essays 5 minute read

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1014 Davis Tenneybook

Liberal arts, Balkanized

Tenney L. Davis was a noted chemist who took pleasure in attending lectures on non-scientific subjects like aesthetics. Today he’s forgotten, which says something about how far along the road of compartmentalizing knowledge we have traveled.

Andrew Mangravite

Essays 5 minute read
1013 mayakovsky

Mayakovsky and the Russian soul

At a time when Russia is beating up on the Republic of Georgia, it helps to know that Vladimir Mayakovsky, the brawling boisterous laureate of Russian Futurism, is as Russian as Pushkin.

Night Wraps the Sky. By Vladimir Mayakovsky; translated and edited by Michael Almereyda. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008. 304 pages, $27.00. www.amazon.com

Andrew Mangravite

Essays 4 minute read
1017 obama

A watershed election (not)

This year’s election should be the left’s opportunity, but the conventional liberal alternative is timid and palsied. And Barack Obama’s performance is increasingly disappointing, not to say alarming.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Essays 6 minute read
1010 Needham

China's "humiliation,' reconsidered

Forget the Chinese obsession with their national “humiliation.” We are just beginning to feel the power of this vast and brilliant people as they gather themselves, and us, along with the rest of the world.

The Man Who Loved China: The Fantastic Story of the Eccentric Scientist Who Unlocked the Mysteries of the Middle Kingdom. By Simon Winchester. HarperCollins, 2008. 336 pages; $27.95.

Reed Stevens

Essays 4 minute read
1011 child crying

Up against the Human Services bureaucracy

A grand jury recently documented the horrific life and death of 14-year-old Danieal Kelly, a cerebral palsy victim who starved to death while under the “care” of Philadelphia’s Department of Human Services. It wasn’t always this way, and it doesn’t have to be, as I can attest from personal experience.
SaraKay Smullens

SaraKay Smullens

Essays 7 minute read
1007 prideandprejudice

Obama as a literary figure

In the New York Times, Maureen Dowd recently equated Barack Obama with Jane Austen’s prideful Mr. Darcy in Pride and Prejudice. A careful parsing of Dowd’s column suggests that the Democratic candidate is damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t.
Rick Soisson

Rick Soisson

Essays 5 minute read