What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’

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Updated 19 October 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’

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  • He shows why truth is an essential democratic value—a value we need to sustain our democratic way of life—and how it can be strengthened

Author: MICHAEL PATRICK LYNCH

Do any of us really care about truth when it comes to politics? Should we? In a world of big lies, denialism, and conspiracy theories, democracies are experiencing two interlocked crises: a loss of confidence in democracy itself and the growing sense among many that politics is only about power—not truth.

In this book, Michael Patrick Lynch argues that truth not only can—but must—matter in politics. He shows why truth is an essential democratic value—a value we need to sustain our democratic way of life—and how it can be strengthened.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Chapter

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Updated 01 March 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: The Chapter

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  • Dames begins with the textual compilations of the Roman world, where chapters evolved as a tool to organize information

Author: Nicholas Dames

Why do books have chapters? With this seemingly simple question, Nicholas Dames embarks on a literary journey spanning two millennia, revealing how an ancient editorial technique became a universally recognized component of narrative art and a means to register the sensation of time.

Dames begins with the textual compilations of the Roman world, where chapters evolved as a tool to organize information. He discusses the earliest divisional systems of the Gospels and the segmentation of medieval romances.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Real Economy:  History and Theory

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Updated 28 February 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: The Real Economy:  History and Theory

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  • Writing for anyone interested in the study of the economy, Levy provides an invaluable provocation for a broader debate in the social sciences and humanities concerning what “the economy” is

What is the economy, really? Is it a “market sector,” a “general equilibrium,” or the “gross domestic product”? Economics today has become so preoccupied with methods that economists risk losing sight of the economy itself.
Meanwhile, other disciplines, although often intent on criticizing the methods of economics, have failed to articulate an alternative vision of the economy. Before the ascent of postwar neoclassical economics, fierce debates raged, as many different visions of the economy circulated and competed with one another. In The Real Economy, Jonathan Levy returns to the spirit of this earlier era, which, in all its contentiousness, gave birth to the discipline of economics.
Writing for anyone interested in the study of the economy, Levy provides an invaluable provocation for a broader debate in the social sciences and humanities concerning what “the economy” is.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Greatness: Diverse Designers of Architecture’

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Updated 28 February 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Greatness: Diverse Designers of Architecture’

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  • “Women and designers of color play a crucial role in realizing many of the world’s greatest architectural projects, yet our recognition is still significantly lacking,” she rightfully states

Author: Pascale Sablan

By shedding light on overlooked figures in architecture, “Greatness: Diverse Designers of Architecture,” published this year, makes an urgent and necessary contribution to the field.

At about 200 pages, this richly detailed book by Pascale Sablan, award-winning architect and CEO of Adjaye Associates, presents an anthology of diverse designers who have reshaped the built environment.

The book features essays, project case studies and a much-needed deep dive into architectural typologies, spanning residential, institutional and master planning.

Sablan, a millennial architect from New York, has spent her career advocating for equity and inclusion in architecture.

“Women and designers of color play a crucial role in realizing many of the world’s greatest architectural projects, yet our recognition is still significantly lacking,” she rightfully states.

Through this book, she seeks to correct that oversight, offering an expansive look at how diverse perspectives have long shaped the field.

The book highlights 40 groundbreaking US-based and international projects, emphasizing themes of dignity, sustainability and social justice.

It also explores architecture’s historical role in systemic injustices such as redlining and housing discrimination while illustrating how inclusive design can lead to meaningful change.

“When I started this career, I had no idea how many women and people of color were behind the iconic buildings that I have come to know and love,” she states.

Blending insightful essays, case studies, and profiles of 47 architects and designers from diverse backgrounds, “Greatness” underscores how architecture can serve as a tool for empowerment.

The featured architects tackle some of the industry’s most pressing challenges, including housing injustice, environmental sustainability and community development. She ensures that some of these vital voices are finally highlighted.

While not a comprehensive list, the book serves as a crucial guide, urging readers to recognize these architects as the “greats” she sees them to be.

Released during Black History Month in the US, “Greatness” challenges the industry to rethink who gets to be called “great” in architecture and how we can all expand upon our definition.

Easy to read, easy to reference and easy to look at, it is a great addition to your coffee table collection.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking Cure’ by Paula Marantz Cohen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking Cure’ by Paula Marantz Cohen
Updated 27 February 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking Cure’ by Paula Marantz Cohen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Talking Cure’ by Paula Marantz Cohen

“Talking Cure” is a timely and enticing excursion into the art of good conversation. Paula Marantz Cohen reveals how conversation connects us in ways that social media never can and explains why simply talking to each other freely and without guile may be the first step to curing what ails our troubled society.

Drawing on her lifelong immersion in literature and culture and her decades of experience as a teacher and critic, Cohen argues that we learn to converse in our families and then carry that knowledge into a broader world where we encounter diverse opinions and sensibilities.


Book Review: ‘Perfect Victims’ by Mohammed El-Kurd

Book Review: ‘Perfect Victims’ by Mohammed El-Kurd
Updated 27 February 2025
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Book Review: ‘Perfect Victims’ by Mohammed El-Kurd

Book Review: ‘Perfect Victims’ by Mohammed El-Kurd

Mohammed El-Kurd’s “Perfect Victims: and the Politics of Appeal,” published in January 2025, is a scorching manifesto against the sanitized narratives of victimhood that dominate Western discourse on Palestine. 

With poetic precision and unyielding clarity, El-Kurd dismantles the “politics of appeal” — the insidious expectation that Palestinians, and other oppressed communities, must contort their suffering into palatable shapes to earn global sympathy. This is not a book that asks for understanding, it demands a reckoning.

Drawing from his lived experience in the occupied Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, El-Kurd exposes the suffocating standards imposed on Palestinian bodies and stories. He unravels how the world’s empathy hinges on the display of “perfect” victimhood: passive, non-threatening, and quiet in its anguish. 

He writes against this expectation, refusing to strip the Palestinian struggle of its dignity and defiance. Instead, El-Kurd reclaims his community’s narrative as one of survival and resilience, asserting, “We are not just the sum of our wounds.”

“Perfect Victims” is more than a critique, it is an unmasking. El-Kurd meticulously dissects how language, media, and international institutions become tools of erasure. He shines a harsh light on the global complicity that demands victims remain meek to be seen as worthy of justice. 

Through case studies, historical context, and deeply personal reflections, he exposes how even well-meaning solidarity can morph into another form of control, reducing the oppressed to mere symbols stripped of agency.

El-Kurd’s prose is vivid and relentless. His words do not simply inform — they pierce. He does not appeal to the reader’s charity but instead confronts them with the uncomfortable truth: that selective empathy is itself a form of violence. His analysis extends beyond Palestine, offering a blueprint for understanding how narratives of victimhood are weaponized against marginalized communities worldwide.

Yet, what makes “Perfect Victims” truly extraordinary is El-Kurd’s unwavering refusal to accept the confines of victimhood. His narrative is a rebellion against the expectation of silence. He writes: “We are not here to perform our pain for your absolution. We are here to live, to love, to resist.” These words resonate as a battle cry — simultaneously a rejection of imposed passivity and an affirmation of life beyond occupation.

This is a book that refuses to be quiet. It is a work of profound defiance, carving out space for Palestinian voices to be heard, not as whispers, but as thunder. “Perfect Victims: and the Politics of Appeal” is a literary and political act of reclamation — a blazing testament to the enduring dignity of a people who refuse to let their story be written by anyone but themselves.