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Lay It Down

People love John Samson Fellows’s music. He doesn’t want to make it anymore.

Out Around the Bay

When Wanda bought the house, she didn’t imagine that anyone in the community would recognize that she and Lynn were queer.

Race and the Tragic View of David Mamet

Even before his very public embrace of right-wing politics in 2008, David Mamet was famous for his divisive, politically-incorrect, and expletive-laced plays. So what happens when the new, liberal-baiting Mamet takes on a subject as charged as race?

Hitler's Cartoon Problem and the Art of Controversy

Napoleon said caricatures “did more than all the armies of Europe” to defeat him. King Louis Philippe jailed a comic artist on the grounds that such a work “amounts to an act of violence.”

Simone Schmidt on Songwriting as a Vehicle for Hope, Visions, and Despair

A new series in which we talk to artists, musicians, and other creators about the books they were reading or inspired by when they made their latest work. This week, it's Simone Schmidt of Toronto's The Highest Order and One Hundred Dollars.