Members of the Congress for Cultural Freedom distribute western literature to refugees from East Germany. © Fritz Eschen/ullstein bild/Getty

Intellectuals

June 13, 2024

The New York Intellectuals were a hallowed group of writers and critics who were convinced of the power and art of disputation. Writer and journalist Tomiwa Owolade, whose perspicacious 2023 book This is Not America would have undoubtedly resonated with the mid-twentieth-century NY Intellectuals, explains why he grew up besotted with the group’s writing. I myself then follow Owolade with my interpretation of the esteemed group through a critical review of a new book on their writing.

We then focus on a very different group of intellectuals—scholars in Russia—who Dmitry Dubrovsky argues are in a state of zugzwang, in which every possible action they endeavor to take results in negative consequences. Dubrovsky’s is a sad and distressing tale.

Our curated content this issue begins with the Munich Security Conference, and features Tom Meaney‘s analytical send-up of this annual gathering. Few equal Meaney’s ability to sustain a romp this convincingly over 8000 words.

David Ownby then provides a terrific overview of the rise and fall (and re-rise) of the Chinese New Left. Ownby gracefully takes us through a complicated set of intellectual relationships these last thirty years in the PRC.

We follow with a fine review essay by Daniel Schillinger, in The Point, that looks at the naturalization of digital technology. Has it all started to reign as common sense and are we entrapped in it forever more?

We then conclude with the critic Farah Abdesammad, who takes us on a very personal tour d’horizon of postcolonial life of North Africans in France.

Our musical selection this week is from Kevin Ayers, one of the progenitors of the late 1960s/ early 1970s Canterbury group of progressive musicians in the UK. This infectious track comes from Ayers’ 1973 record Bananamour.

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations