Liberties - A Journal of Culture and Politics features new essays and poetry from some of today’s best writers and artists, along with introducing new talent, to inspire and impact the intellectual and creative lifeblood of culture and politics. This inaugural issue ofLiberties includes: Michael Ignatieff on liberalism and the environment; Laura Kipnis cheers transgression; David Grossman on literature and peace; Ramachandra Guha on the Indian tragedy; Thomas Chatterton Williams on the real James Baldwin; Mark Lilla on the power of indifference; Helen Vendler on Yeats'The Second Coming; Sean Wilentz on abolition and American origins; Adam Zagajeweski on Gustav Mahler; James Wolcott on America’s modern Jacobins; Andrea Marcolongo on how language defines us; Eli Lake on the birth of American unexceptionalism; Sally Satel on the riddle of addiction; Moshe Halbertal on creating a democratic Jewish state; David Thomson on the wonder of Terrence Malick; Julius Margolin’s memoir confronting hatred; Clara Collier on plague literature; Shawn McCreesh’s personal look at a youthful community of addiction; new poetry from the most recent winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Louise Glück , Joshua Bennett, and Hannah Sullivan; and, Leon Wieseltier (editor) and Celeste Marcus (managing editor). Leon Wieseltier is the editor ofLiberties. Celeste Marcus is the managing editor ofLiberties. Michael Ignatieff is the President of Central European University. Laura Kipnis is a Professor in the department of Radio/TV/Film at Northwestern University and author most recently ofUnwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus. David Grossman’s most recent novel isA Horse Walks into a Bar. Ramachandra Guha is the author ofGhandi: Before India andGhandi: The Years that Changed the World. Thomas Chatterton Williams is the author most recently ofSelf Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race. Hannah Sullivan is author ofThree Poems andThe Work of Revision. Mark Lilla is a Professor of Humanities at Columbia University and the author ofThe Once and Future Liberal. Helen Vendler is the A. Kingsley Porter University Professor Emerita at Harvard University, and the author ofOur Secret Disciplline: Yeats and Lyric Form. Sean Wilentz is the George Henry Davis 1886 Professor of American History at Princeton University and the author most recently ofNo Property in Man: Slavery and Antislavery at the Nation's Founding. Adam Zagajewski’s most recent book of poems isAsymmetry. Louise Glück is the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2020, the author, among other books, ofFaithful and Virtuous NightandPoems 1962-2012. James Wolcott is the author ofCritical Mass: Four Decades of Essays, Reviews, Hand Grenades and Hurrahs. Andrea Marcolongo is the author ofThe Ingenious Language: Nine Epic Reasons to Love Greek. Eil Lake writes a column for Bloomberg Opinion. Sally Satel is a Visiting Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University's Irving Medical Center and a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Moshe Halbertal’s book isNhmanides: Law and Mysticism was published this fall. Joshua Bennett is the Mellon Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Dartmouth College, and author ofBeing Properity Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man and The Sobbing School. David Thomson is the author most recently ofMurder and the Movies. His new booksA Light in the Dark: A History of Movie Directors andDisaster Mon Amour will be published in 2021. Julius Margolin was the author ofJourney to the Land of the Zeks and Back: A Memoir of the Gulag recently published by Oxford University Press. Clara Collier is a writer living in California. Shawn McCreesh is a writer living in Washington, DC. |