A Study of Italian Fascism: Rosi’s ‘Christ Stopped at Eboli’
Francesco Rosi’s Christ Stopped at Eboli, the director’s faithful 1979 adaptation of Carlo Levi’s chronicle of his exile in the Italian South during the years of...
Francesco Rosi’s Christ Stopped at Eboli, the director’s faithful 1979 adaptation of Carlo Levi’s chronicle of his exile in the Italian South during the years of...
Like many Australian Jews of my generation, I grew up in the shadow of the Holocaust. My grandparents were survivors, the kind who fled to a faraway...
Why do we leave home and country? If all unhappy families are unhappy in their own ways, then there might be just as many reasons for...
To be queer and Asian is both a singular and collective experience. Our bodies become a reclamation in reconciling self-identity with communities that can, oftentimes, feel...
Not too long ago, the phrase sous vide could only be found in fancy, overpriced restaurants and certain episodes of Top Chef. Now, thanks to an...
Ever been curious what the longest YA book series is? Given that YA books have increased in size over the last decade or so, it’s fascinating...
Hey all. It’s me. Your friendly Game of Thrones theorist. Now, you’re going to see some spoilers ahead, okay? So don’t keep going if you haven’t...
It’s that favorite time of the year for Muslims, y’all. The Islamic month of Ramadan is just around the corner, and that means no eating or...
May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, which gives bibliophiles 31 days of perfect opportunities to add one, two, or possibly a few more...
Emma Bovary was many things—vain, depressed, thoughtless, passionate, a spendthrift—but most importantly: Emma Bovary was a reader. A book devourer. A connoisseur of the written word,...