AuthorSerendipity

Everything You Need to Know About Groundbreaking Queer Feminist Science Fiction Writer Joanna Russ ‹ Literary Hub

When she was in high school in the early 1950’s, Joanna Russ (1930–2011) read Mark Twain’s short story  “A Medieval Romance,” about a duke without a male heir who brings his daughter up to fill the role, hiding her gender from all. Things get complicated when the duke’s niece falls in love with his “son,” threatening to reveal her true identity and upset the succession. Russ, who would go on to...

On the Photography of Christopher Payne ‹ Literary Hub

Christopher Payne was en route through Brooklyn on his way to the MTA Overhaul Shop in Coney Island, where they rebuild and maintain subway cars. As he passed storefronts, bodegas, and restaurants, he commented, STEAKS, CHOPS, SEAFOODyou dont see that on the signs for diners anymore. Payne is renowned for his photographs documenting industry in America. When he creates images of things being...

AI, Aint I A Woman? On the Blindness and Limitations of Artificial Intelligence ‹ Literary Hub

I sensed an opening. Research papers could reach academics and industry practitioners focused on AI, but I needed something more to reach everyday people. I also needed to reach decision-makers like elected officials who might be seduced by the promises of AI to bring increased efficiency without being aware of racial, gender, and other types of bias. Did the government officials in India...

How a 17th Century Priest Invented the Russian Novel ‹ Literary Hub

Before invading Ukraine, Russia’s President Putin laid out his justification for military action in long, angry speeches. Among false claims about Ukrainian atrocities against Russians and his well-worn lament about encroaching Western influence, he invoked a past “since time immemorial” when the people living within what he considers the artificially drawn borders of Ukraine “called themselves...

How David Cornwell Became John Le Carré ‹ Literary Hub

“People believe what they want to believe,” wrote David Cornwell to one of his lovers. “ALWAYS.” He was referring to the “revelation” that Graham Greene had continued working for British intelligence into his seventies. “No good me telling them that GG was far too drunk to remember anything, & that his residual connections with the Brit spooks were romantic fantasy.” When he wrote that...

Can a Computer Write Like Eudora Welty? ‹ Literary Hub

By now, weve seen the ChatGPT parlor tricks. Were past the novelty of a cake recipe in the style of Walt Whitman or a weather report by painter Bob Ross. For the one-hundredth time, we understand the current incarnation of large language models make mistakes. Weve done our best to strike a studied balance between doomersand evangelists. And, weve become less skeptical of emergent flashes of...

The Transcendental Genius of George Balanchine’s Ballet ‹ Literary Hub

This: the suffering, the grit and hardship of everyday life, never once appeared in Balanchine’s dances. It did not interest him—it was pedestrian, a degradation of the human body and spirit. Even the dead bodies in his ballets were set against a backdrop of eternity and had a sense of spirituality and redemption that elevated the body out of the ordinary—dead bodies, yes, but really dead souls...

How W.H. Auden Made Austria His Adopted Home ‹ Literary Hub

W.H. Auden has become so central to my life over the past forty years that there never appears to have been a time that it could have been otherwise. He is, for me, a talismanic touchstone. My conversation has become so peppered with quotes from his work and about his life that I am frequently asked when I first met him. I was still at school in Ireland when he died in 1973. His niece married an...

Ursula K. Le Guin on Writing and Parenting with Her Husband, Charles ‹ Literary Hub

The Journey That Matters is a series of six short videos from Arwen Curry, the director and producer of Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin, a Hugo Award-nominated 2018 feature documentary about the iconic author. In the final installment of the series, Julie Phillips reflects on “He’s My First Reader,” in which Ursula and her husband, Charles, discuss how their division of household labor helped Ursula...

Hilary Mantel Loved Newspapers and Other Insights From Her Longtime Editor ‹ Literary Hub

When Hilary Mantel died, unexpectedly, in Budleigh Salterton, Devon, in September 2022, she was a week away from moving to Kinsale, Ireland, a reconnection with her Irish Catholic roots. She and her husband Gerald McEwen had bought a house with views over the surrounding countryside. At the heart of this collection is a piece about the writer John McGahern, the great chronicler of Irish rural...

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