This Week in Essays
For The Baffler, Ann Neumann looks at embracing menopause as a natural and necessary stage of life. “I find myself a kind of manager of my body, the type who diligently attends professional development...
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“The body becomes little more than an object, sometimes, something abstracted from yourself, a doll loose in the hands of another.” At Catapult, s.e. smith finds that bodily autonomy is difficult to...
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For Naihobe Gonzalez, writing at The Offing, continual blackouts lead to a tenuous living situation. At Entropy, Claire Sicherman and Marissa Korbel explore the tribulations of adolescence. “Instead,...
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At n+1, Jeremiah Moss considers the joys, terrors, and resurgent rats of New York City. For Pidgeonholes, Julia Edith Rios writes about the particular weight of a nickname as it relates to body image...
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At Guernica, Simona Blat sets out to see if anything could possibly be good luck in 2020, the year of the rat. For The Point magazine, Agnes Callard reflects on how creating special rules for geniuses...
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Alexander Sammon gives a helpful firsthand look at the perils of casual daytrading for n+1. For Midnight & Indigo, Jasminum McMullen discovers that body size is not a factor in street harassment....
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For The Nasiona, Mydalis Vera revels in the bread that we don’t have to make. Anubha Momin’s mother’s deep connection to architecture comes into focus on a road trip to Frank Lloyd Wright’s houses,...
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Anna Machin looks at the science of why friendships are to be treasured over at Aeon. “Nothing from the past is as glorious as I remember it. If I get close enough, the memories fall apart.” Hanif...
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