The American Scholar
Emerson's call for American thinkers to stop deferring to Europe and trust their own experience. You can hear a whole culture deciding to grow up.
Read itRalph Waldo Emerson
Emerson's call for American thinkers to stop deferring to Europe and trust their own experience. You can hear a whole culture deciding to grow up.
Read itintellectual lifeamericaindependence
Hilaire Belloc
Belloc's prediction that capitalism and socialism would both drift toward a society where the many are secure but unfree. The specific forecasts miss; the structural worry reads as eerily current.
view similar →E. M. Forster
Forster imagines a humanity living underground, served by a Machine it has forgotten how to repair, communicating only through screens. Written in 1909, a fact you will not believe by the final page.
view similar →James Madison
Madison on faction — why a large republic can defuse the very factions that wreck small ones. Reasoning from incentives rather than good intentions, which is why it still reads as realism.
view similar →John McPhee
McPhee plays a tournament of Monopoly while reporting on the real Atlantic City streets the board is named for, the two layers grinding against each other. A structural trick so quiet you only notice it after it's done its work.
view similar →Paul Theroux
Theroux rides the trains from London to Japan and back, recording the awkward, dull, and human bits other travel writers cut. Travel as sustained looking, not tourism.
view similar →George Orwell
Orwell's account of fighting in the Spanish Civil War and watching the official story drift from what he'd seen with his own eyes. The confusion is left in, because the confusion was the truth.
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