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Posts by Critical Inquiry

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"Scherman created the Book‐of‐the‐Month Club (BOMC) with the intention of selling hundreds of thousands of books to a stable group of magazine‐like subscribers."

Read Janice Radway's "On the Significance of Middlebrow Authority": www-journals-uchicago-edu.proxy.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

17 hours ago 1 0 0 0
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"Elizabeth’s sudden decision to abolish the death penalty was an enigma both to her subjects and to foreign observers, particularly as it caused considerable logistical difficulties."

From our new issue, read Boris Maslov's "An Incorporate Fellowship?": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

3 days ago 0 0 0 0
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"I have argued that Auerbach’s critique of Christian figuralism is Jewishly inflected. What about his remaining philology? What makes it Jewish too?"

From our new issue, read James I. Porter's "When Is Philology Made Jewish?, Part 2": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

1 week ago 3 0 0 0
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"Beware those whose nostalgia is for gender itself, for a time where they imagine we trans people—and often we queers and we feminists, too—did not exist."

From our new issue, read Emily McAvan's "Theses on the Future History of Trans People": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

1 week ago 3 0 0 0
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"Oysters . . . possess what Parker dubs a uniquely paranatural ontology: they live a 'double life,' existing as both discrete objects as well as agents of transformation."

In review, Lida Zeitlin-Wu on Thomas R. Parker's Paranatures in Culinary Culture: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/lida_zeitlin...

1 week ago 1 2 0 0
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"Though the archival turn is indeed still turning, the way that acts of translation have become enmeshed in poetics of the archive suggests a radical departure."

From our new issue, read Maxwell Gontarek's "Writing a Book I Was Not Writing": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

2 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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"But the urgent question for any human translator remains: How, after overcoming the shock of obsolescence, should this future be managed?"

From our new issue, read Lawrence Venuti's "The Human Translator versus the Machine": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

2 weeks ago 1 1 0 0
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"This fresh view of history clarifies how traditions can sustain cultural legibility across centuries despite radical transformations."

New in review, Susanna Sun on Casey Schoenberger's Music, Mind, and Language in Chinese Poetry and Performance: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/susanna_sun_...

2 weeks ago 3 0 0 0
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"Instead of reading AI's hallucinations as an error in the system, it's time we read them as the electronic drive [trieb] of an emerging new unconscious." Read Johann Witz's "AI's Split Subjectivity" in the new issue of CI.

criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/witz/

2 weeks ago 5 0 0 1
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"Should we only bring texts together empirically based on family resemblances, falling back on a purely sociological or ethnological description of related practices?"

From our new issue, read Alexandre Gefen's "Literature as Soft Power": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

3 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
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"What looks like objective detection is always embedded in institutional incentives—who benefits from exposure, who risks reputational ruin, and who gets to frame a narrative of deception."

New in review, Zheng Wang on Roger Kreuz's Strikingly Similar: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/zheng_wang_r...

3 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
Habermas behind a typewriter, surrounded by bookcases

Habermas behind a typewriter, surrounded by bookcases

CI remembers Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026). Read his essay "Georg Simmel on Philosophy and Culture: Postscript to a Collection of Essays" (1996).

www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...

3 weeks ago 2 1 0 0
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Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026). Read his "Work and Weltanschauung: The Heidegger Controversy from a German Perspective" in our 1989 symposium on Heidegger and Nazism.
www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...

3 weeks ago 0 2 0 0
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"That during their calculation words are not grounded by their extensions, however, does not necessarily mean that LLMs are to be dismissed—after all, it is also human to make mistakes."

From our new issue, Mercedes Bunz's "On the Calculation of Meaning": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

4 weeks ago 4 2 0 0
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"That during their calculation words are not grounded by their extensions, however, does not necessarily mean that LLMs are to be dismissed—after all, it is also human to make mistakes."

From our new issue, Mercedes Bunz's "On the Calculation of Meaning": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

4 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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"Over the past two centuries it has become the predominant narrative mechanism by and through which we determine our affective and intellectual relations to others, both fictional and real."

From our new issue, read Loren Glass's "Close Third": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...

1 month ago 0 1 0 0

What a nice surprise: my review of @dcjenkin-smith.bsky.social's "The Rise of Office Literature" made it into the print version of Critical Inquiry -- and it's in great company!
@bloomsburyacademic.bsky.social

Have a look at the Spring 2026 issue:

1 month ago 7 2 1 0
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Spring issue has arrived! Read new work by Loren Glass, Mercedes Bunz, Alexandre Gefen, Lawrence Venuti, Maxwell Gontarek, Emily McAvan, James I. Porter, and Boris Maslov.

criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/past_issues/...

1 month ago 9 2 0 1
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"Over the past two centuries it has become the predominant narrative mechanism by and through which we determine our affective and intellectual relations to others, both fictional and real."

From our new issue, read Loren Glass's "Close Third": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...

1 month ago 0 1 0 0
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"Lebovic offers a compelling account of temporality as the shared substrate of living existence from which we might assemble alternative grounds for politics."

New in review, Tsiona Lida on Nitzan Lebovic's Homo Temporalis: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/tsiona_lida_...

1 month ago 1 0 0 0
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"This articulation of saint and nation, I would argue, began at the very end of the nineteenth century with the Cuban war of independence against Spain and the Americans."

From our Spring 2009 issue, read Marc Blanchard's "From Cuba with Saints": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

1 month ago 1 1 0 0
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"In an era of ecological crisis, his patient efforts to reconstruct the dialectic of Enlightenment naturalism offer vital resources for reimagining our place in the web of life."

Alex Betancourt on Richard J. Bernstein's The Vicissitudes of Nature: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/alex_betanco...

1 month ago 3 0 0 0
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"The houses and squares of Cologne, the cathedral are seen as surface phenomena, as congealed, materialized masks, as a kind of archaeological kitchen trash."

From our Winter 2005 issue, read Vilém Flusser's "The City as Wave‐Trough in the Image‐Flood": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

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A Minor Form of Life: An Interview with Dipesh Chakrabarty by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow This interview was conducted after Dipesh Chakrabarty gave the keynote to the conference "The Climate of Philosophy: The Ecological Crises as a Challenge for Philosophy and the History of Ideas" at the University of Wuppertal in November 2024, organized by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow. The conference discussed the challenges that the current planetary ecological crisis poses for the ways in which we tell, and today need to retell, the history of philosophy and the history of ideas.

"Every book I've written or every project I've undertaken – they have all started, unselfconsciously, from a sense of loss." Read Dipesh Chakrabarty's interview by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow. Now on the CI blog.

1 month ago 2 1 0 1
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"Although both multistable images . . . are ambiguous, they seem to observe the gestalt principle of exclusive allocation: it is impossible to see both images at once."

From Winter 2008, read Ingrid Monson's "Hearing, Seeing, and Perceptual Agency: www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

1 month ago 1 0 0 0
A Minor Form of Life: An Interview with Dipesh Chakrabarty by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow This interview was conducted after Dipesh Chakrabarty gave the keynote to the conference "The Climate of Philosophy: The Ecological Crises as a Challenge for Philosophy and the History of Ideas" at the University of Wuppertal in November 2024, organized by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow. The conference discussed the challenges that the current planetary ecological crisis poses for the ways in which we tell, and today need to retell, the history of philosophy and the history of ideas.

"Every book I've written or every project I've undertaken – they have all started, unselfconsciously, from a sense of loss." Read Dipesh Chakrabarty's interview by Melanie Sehgal and Martin Mulsow. Now on the CI blog.

1 month ago 2 1 0 1
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"The first chapter, on Bosch, is not only the longest but the beating heart of the book, pumping agonistic blood into the whole."

New in review, Andrei Pop on Joseph Leo Koerner's Art in a State of Siege: criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/andrei_pop_r...

1 month ago 3 1 0 0
Preview
The Meaning of AI A conference on artificial intelligence and the humanities

www.eventbrite.com/e/the-meanin...

1 month ago 7 2 0 0
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"Abstraction is a metaphor, not a style; the connection of one abstract work to another is by family resemblance, in Wittgenstein's sense."

From our Spring 2013 issue, read Charles Bernstein's "Disfiguring Abstraction": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

1 month ago 5 2 1 0
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"Panofsky's worry about Heidegger is a concern about the risks of what he interprets as an underlying lack of interest in constraints."

From our Spring 2012 issue, read Jaś Elsner and Katharina Lorenz's "The Genesis of Iconology": www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10....

2 months ago 4 0 0 0