Tag Archives: Samuel Johnson

Bloom: The Bard Invented the Human

I examine how Harold Bloom believes that Shakespeare changed history.

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Homer, Virgil, Dante and the Afterlife

Literary afterlives, such as we encounter in Homer, Virgil, and Dante, are as much about this world as the next.

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The Vanity of Human Wishes

To mark today’s reading (from Ecclesiastes) about human vanity, I turn to Samuel Johnson’s great poem about the subject.

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Johnson: Read the Bard, Not Tom Jones

I share the Samuel Johnson chapter from my book-in-progress.

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Does Lit Lead to Illicit Sex?

Dante’s beautifully tragic account of Paolo and Francesca captures–as many great works do–the dangers of total absorption in a relationship.

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On Rereading During a Pandemic

In three articles on rereading great literature during difficult times, two discuss how it reassures them and the third that literature isn’t meant to reassure.

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Knives Out and the American Dream

The movie “Knives Out” is satisfying but leaves unquestioned the American Dream.

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Is Old Age Becoming Overrated?

A “New Yorker” article on aging turns to literature to debunk the notion that aging is a good thing.

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The Anxiety of Harold Bloom

The late Harold Bloom longed to be a Samuel Johnson but never got there.

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