Lit Hub Daily: April 30, 2020
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1959, Bertolt Brecht’s Saint Joan of the Stockyards receives its stage première.
- Reconsidering the American myth of a distant paradise: Greil Marcus on The Great Gatsby as a blues fable of the Great Depression. | Lit Hub
- “Love extends in strange ways across the border between the healthy and the sick.” Gabriela Wiener writes from the midst of coronavirus in Madrid. | Lit Hub: Life in a Pandemic
- On the 1930s antifascist writing of Dorothy Thompson, who understood that demagogic leaders can gain power anywhere, anytime. | Lit Hub Politics
- 20 writers offer up one joy and one worry of this moment in pandemic, including Ada Limón, Eduardo C. Corral, Tyehimba Jess, and more. | Lit Hub: Life in a Pandemic
- “Could I have loved in dignity in Communist Poland?” Tomasz Jedrowski on writing the story of Polish queerness. | Lit Hub
- Monica Sok talks to Louis Elliot about writing the Cambodian story beyond trauma. | Lit Hub
- ON THE VBC: Rufi Thorpe talks queer friendship, unruly bodies, and RuPaul’s Drag Race, on Sheltering · Watch Danielle Lazarin, Audrey Olivero, and Jennifer Rosner on the Antibody Reading Series. | Lit Hub
- “Inside the temple, visitors cannot know, cherries are blooming.” Marie Mutsuki Mockett on reading Basho with her ten-year-old. | The Paris Review
- In the latest entry to the After Decameron project, in which artists and writers add to an ongoing collective story, Artun Özgüner examines the things we leave behind: gloves, masks, cigarette butts and all. | Open Space
- Support is growing for a petition asking the Poetry Foundation to allocate some of its sizable yearly budget to struggling writers. | Publishers Weekly
- “Who knows how we’ll feel about sharing books with strangers in the future?” On missing the library, a place where we could say yes to everything. | Human Parts
- “Ironically, I already felt like I was in quarantine.”Fellows of the Fine Arts Work Center report from life in Provincetown during the coronavirus pandemic. | Los Angeles Times
- Barnes & Noble warehouse workers are protesting unsafe conditions at their workplace, which employs 800 people. | NJ.com
- An online auction to help comic book shops has raised over $430,000 dollars. | The New York Times
Also on Lit Hub: Lucas Iberico Lozada on newly-translated Latin American stories defy colonial myths • A joy and a worry during COVID-19 from Ada Limón, Tyehimba Jess, and more writers • Read an excerpt from Mieko Kawakami’s Breasts and Eggs, trans. by Sam Bett and David Boyd.
Article continues after advertisement
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.