Category Culture

Southern Exposure – The American Conservative

Prepping for a return visit to the attractive and prospering city of Greenville, South Carolina, I grabbed the only South Carolina travel book in our library system. An entry in the Moon series, it reassured Northern visitors that Greenville “is…

Siena’s Medieval Cityscape – The American Conservative

The Loggia della Mercanzia. The arched structure was originallycompleted during the 15th century; the upper story dates to the 17th.Credit: Catesby Leigh Pictorial values in urbanism are typified by straight streets receding in perspective to their vanishing point on the…

Sandra Cisneros May Put You in a Poem

“A poem is never done,” the writer Sandra Cisneros told me in July, over dinner at La Posadita, a restaurant in San Miguel de Allende, the Mexican city where she’s lived for almost ten years. Wearing a black-and-white huipil and…

Samuel Fosso’s Century in Selfies

It often takes a few moments to recognize Samuel Fosso in his self-portraits. He’s a picture of otherworldly piety as the first Black Pope, stepping on a space rock as though ready to catechize the cosmos. (It’s a cheeky allusion…

Roz Chast’s “Neighborhood’s Finest”

During quarantine, for those of us lucky enough to be able to work remotely, home became our whole world. Restrictions have lifted, and many have been able to resume trips not just to the office but to the movie theatre,…

Reckoning with the Slave Ship Clotilda

In Margaret Brown’s documentary “Descendant,” a man named Anderson Flen walks through the streets of Montgomery, Alabama, and wonders aloud about the people who walked there before him, people who had less freedom and fewer opportunities. He’s from Africatown, a…