By force of her imagination and skill, Emily Dickinson could take the measure of solitude, opprobrium and even damnation.
Nothing New,” which the American poet wrote in 1918, is published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
She's reviving the Black Arts Movement’s tradition of pairing poetry with live music—and drawing Gen Z off their phones and ...
Throughout history, poets have captured the essence of love, desire, longing, and devotion in their verses. Romantic poetry ...
On Valentine’s Day, four classical dancers — Navia Natarajan, N. Srikanth, Divya Devaguptapu and Amrita Lahiri write about ...
Modern accounts of Sylvia Plath’s renowned work and legacy seek to highlight the author’s resilience through a decade-long ...
February, and the events of this year so far have not inspired much optimism. Diversity, equity and inclusion programs are being slashed, hundreds of people have lost their homes to fires and members ...
She lets out a sigh and has a good cry, I tell her to release her feelings one at a time,” Cecelia, 30, wrote in a poem that ...
A small business owner has written a poem highlighting the challenges facing shops in his home town, and encouraging locals ...
Research shows that AI companions can help lonely individuals, at least in the short term. A 2022 study found that ...
That there are two sides to every story is cliché. That there are two stories to every marriage is almost science ...
Elizabeth Willis, since arriving on the University of Iowa campus a decade ago, has come to epitomize the iconic and esteemed ...