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- Explore a Digitized Edition of the Voynich Manuscript, “the World’s Most Mysterious Book”by OC on January 30, 2025 at 10:00 am
A 600-year-old manuscript—written in a script no one has ever decoded, filled with cryptic illustrations, its origins remaining to this day a mystery…. It’s not as satisfying a plot, say, of a National Treasure or Dan Brown thriller, certainly not as action-packed as pick-your-Indiana Jones…. The Voynich Manuscript, named for the antiquarian who rediscovered it
- How Robert Frost Wrote One of His Most Famous Poems, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”by Colin Marshall on January 30, 2025 at 9:00 am
Several generations of American students have now had the experience of being told by an English teacher that they’d been reading Robert Frost all wrong, even if they’d never read him at all. Most, at least, had seen his lines “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— / I took the one less traveled
- Mahatma Gandhi’s List of the Seven Social Sins; or Tips on How to Avoid Living the Bad Lifeby OC on January 29, 2025 at 10:00 am
Image via Wikimedia Commons In 590 AD, Pope Gregory I unveiled a list of the Seven Deadly Sins – lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy and pride – as a way to keep the flock from straying into the thorny fields of ungodliness. These days, though, for all but the most devout, Pope Gregory’s list
- How Frank Lloyd Wright Became Frank Lloyd Wright: A Video Introductionby Colin Marshall on January 29, 2025 at 9:00 am
Frank Lloyd Wright is unlikely to be displaced as the archetype of the genius architect anytime soon, at least in America, but even he had to start somewhere. At nine years old, as architecture YouTuber Stewart Hicks explains in the video above, Wright received a set of blocks from his mother, who hoped that “her
- When Neapolitans Used to Eat Pasta with Their Bare Hands: Watch Footage from 1903by Colin Marshall on January 28, 2025 at 10:00 am
Even if you don’t speak Italian, you can make a decent guess at the meaning of the word mangiamaccheroni. The tricky bit is that maccheroni refers not to the pasta English-speakers today call macaroni, tubular and cut into small curved sections, but to pasta in general. Or at least it did around the turn of
- Benedict Cumberbatch Reads a Letter to a Man Blow-Drying His Balls at the Gymby OC on January 28, 2025 at 9:00 am
We have featured Benedict Cumberbatch reading letters by Kurt Vonnegut, Alan Turing, Albert Camus, and Nick Cave, along with passages from Kafka’s Metamorphosis and Melville’s Moby Dick. It’s all pretty heady stuff. And now it’s time for something completely different. Above, we have Mr. Cumberbatch reading, with classic British understatement, a comical letter written by Ross Beeley,
- How Erik Satie’s ‘Furniture Music’ Was Designed to Be Ignored and Paved the Way for Ambient Musicby Colin Marshall on January 27, 2025 at 10:00 am
Imagine how many times someone born in the eighteen-sixties could ever expect to hear music. The number would vary, of course, depending on the individual’s class and family inclinations. Suffice it to say that each chance would have been more precious than those of us in the twenty-first century can easily understand. Our ability to
- A 1933 Profile of Frida Kahlo: “Wife of the Master Mural Painter Gleefully Dabbles in Works of Art”by OC on January 27, 2025 at 5:55 am
Walter Keane—supposed painter of “Big Eyed Children” and subject of a 2014 Tim Burton film—made a killing, attaining almost Thomas Kinkade-like status in the middlebrow art market of the 1950s and 60s. As it turns out, his wife, Margaret was in fact the artist, “painting 16 hours a day,” according to a Guardian profile. In
- Noam Chomsky Defines What It Means to Be a Truly Educated Personby OC on January 24, 2025 at 10:00 am
There may be no more contentious an issue at the level of local U.S. government than education. All of the socioeconomic and cultural fault lines communities would rather paper over become fully exposed in debates over funding, curriculum, districting, etc. But we rarely hear discussions about educational policy at the national level these days. You’ll
- Where Do You Put the Camera? Every Frame a Painting Presents Insights from Famous Directorsby Colin Marshall on January 24, 2025 at 9:00 am
Whether or not we believe in auteurhood, we each have our own mental image of what a film director does. But if we’ve never actually seen one at work, we’re liable not to understand what the actual experience of directing feels like: making decision after decision after decision, during the shoot and at all other