The Vanishing of the Public Intellectual
Public intellectuals no longer exist, argues Moustafa Bayoumi; they have been usurped by “influencers.”
Public intellectuals no longer exist, argues Moustafa Bayoumi; they have been usurped by “influencers.”
The editors of The Markaz Review made the difficult choice of selecting just two of their go-to public intellectuals.
Salar Abdoh reports from Tehran on the beauty and complexity of Iranian literature that thrives despite warring factions.
Nektaria Anastasiadou writes about her decision to pen her works using the historically fractured language of the Istanbul dialect of Greek.
In Farah Ahamed’s latest satire, one man’s misunderstood greatness drives him to take preposterous action.
Dalia Sofer reviews Reza Aslan’s latest book on American Howard Baskerville, “martyred” alongside revolutionary students in Iran in 1909.
Deborah Lindsey Williams Writing in the early part of the 19th century, Alexis de Tocqueville observed that in
In Hisham Bustani’s new short story, one man’s religious nightmare brings him face to face with an unlikely public intellectual of his day.
Deborah Kapchan calls for public intellectuals who can speak in many registers amidst the rise of attacks on intellectualism everywhere.
Twenty years ago, argues Amal Ghandour, it would have been Edward Said. It’s Traboulsi, his best translator, in 2023.
In her new book, Dima Issa argues that the influence of Lebanese vocal artist Fairouz on the Arab diaspora has been profound.
Yasmine Al Rashidi on writer-thinker Alaa Abdel Fattah who advocates for the rights of those without platforms to campaign for themselves.