"Chivalry" with Sarah Solemani and Steve Coogan is the latest show to take on #MeToo, but sometimes the best hits are the most indirect.
Batuman's new book "Either/Or" is a sequel to "The Idiot", which could itself be read as a reworking of her first book "The Possessed". What is going on here?
Why do female chess players still rank so far below their male equivalents?
Reading "You Have Not Yet Been Defeated", Nadine El-Enany gains a new understanding of guilt, fear, and the need to speak.
Having been warned that Protestant girls would lead him to Hell, the teenage Laurie Taylor still decided to risk his eternal soul.
The big questions become bigger in prison: is life a dream, what is freedom, what is a good life?
From Charles VI of France, the "glass king", to a strange case of Erotomania during Hollywood's Golden Age, Victoria Shepherd charts a history of delusional thinking, which sheds much light on the phenomenon today.
A Soviet member of the elite and an English poet build a relationship between the west and east.
Haskell makes an eloquent, beautiful case for the importance of listening, even as sounds themselves decay into oblivion.
A century after its publication, is Joyce’s epic still the greatest work of humanist literature?