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Stephen Miller

25 articles 2007–2018

Intersectionality for Dummies

Stephen Miller · January 19, 2018

I’m a former English professor, so I’m familiar with the jargon literary theorists often use—aporia, hermeneutics, deconstruction, and the French différance, a favorite word of the impenetrable Jacques Derrida—but in a recent book review I came upon an academic-sounding word that I had never seen…

Shared Words

Stephen Miller · December 1, 2017

Some historians talk about a “reading revolution” in the middle of the 18th century, during which literacy rates rose and people came increasingly to prefer reading silently over reading aloud—mainly novels, a relatively new literary form. In The Social Life of Books, Abigail Williams, a professor…

Axios: Trump Expected to Slash Refugee Caps

Andrew Egger · September 25, 2017

Axios’s Jonathan Swan reported Monday that the White House is expected to announce it will accept about 40,000 refugees in fiscal year 2018—a dramatic drop from the 110,000 refugees President Obama authorized for 2017, and a substantial reduction from the 50,000 quota Trump set in an executive…

White House Watch: Trump and Sessions to End DACA

Michael Warren · September 5, 2017

Will hundreds of thousands of young immigrants, brought illegally to the United States as minors by their families, suddenly be at risk for deportation? That’s what hangs in the balance with the Trump administration’s expected announcement that he will fulfill a campaign promise and rollback the…

Who's Winning the White House Wars?

Michael Warren · August 3, 2017

General John Kelly may be trying to institute military-style discipline in the West Wing, but that hasn’t put a stop to the civil war happening over President Donald Trump’s National Security Council. If anything, the dawning of the Kelly era may have accelerated that war.

Remembering Mary McCarthy (Less Than Fondly)

Stephen Miller · July 14, 2017

When the novelist and essayist Mary McCarthy died in 1989 many observers called her the foremost American woman of letters. In the past quarter of a century, McCarthy’s writing has faded from sight, but she may be making a comeback, for the Library of America recently published a two-volume edition…

A Modest Proposal

Stephen Miller · May 12, 2017

In his address to Congress, President Trump promised that "dying industries will come roaring back to life." I think the president should be even more ambitious: He should seriously consider bringing back industries and services that have already died. And I can think of two "dead" products that…

Word Inflation

Stephen Miller · May 5, 2017

Driving past an office building under construction in Reston, Virginia, where I live, I noticed posters on the building that said: "Iconic Offices." While reading a newspaper online, a pop-up ad came up that said, "Make Your Escape Iconic!" It was promoting a hotel in Miami Beach. I was puzzled.…

How Charles Darwin Got New England Talking

Stephen Miller · March 31, 2017

In early 1860, on the eve of the Civil War, Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species—published in Britain in November 1859—became a topic of conversation among a number of New England intellectuals. Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau read the Origin. So did Bronson Alcott, the father of…

Survival of the Pithiest

Stephen Miller · March 31, 2017

In early 1860, on the eve of the Civil War, Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species—published in Britain in November 1859—became a topic of conversation among a number of New England intellectuals. Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau read the Origin. So did Bronson Alcott, the father of…

What Did Adam Smith Really Believe?

Stephen Miller · February 13, 2017

Adam Smith (1723-1790) may be the most misunderstood British thinker of the last 500 years—misunderstood not by intellectual historians but by journalists and the educated public. A case in point: Steven Pearlstein, a well-regarded business journalist, asserts that Smith argued that the…

Invisible Handler

Stephen Miller · February 10, 2017

Adam Smith (1723-1790) may be the most misunderstood British thinker of the last 500 years—misunderstood not by intellectual historians but by journalists and the educated public. A case in point: Steven Pearlstein, a well-regarded business journalist, asserts that Smith argued that the…

Getting and Spending

Stephen Miller · January 27, 2017

William Wordsworth is a great English poet, but one poem he wrote irritates me. It’s the sonnet that begins: The world is too much with us; late and soon, / Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers. I beg to differ. There's nothing wrong with getting and spending so long as you don't do it…

How Scotland's Defeat Made Great Britain a World Power

Stephen Miller · December 5, 2016

In its Great Battles series, Oxford University Press has published studies of Waterloo, Gallipoli, Alamein, Agincourt, and Hattin—the battle Saladin won that enabled him to recapture Jerusalem from the Crusaders. The latest entry in this series focuses on the Battle of Culloden, which took place on…

Sociable Skeptic

Stephen Miller · December 2, 2016

In his early twenties, David Hume (1711-1776), who is regarded by many observers as Britain’s greatest philosopher, studied law and worked briefly for a Bristol merchant, but he soon decided he wanted to be a man of letters. Instead of moving to London and becoming a journalist—the usual path for…

The Spirit of ’45

Stephen Miller · December 2, 2016

In its Great Battles series, Oxford University Press has published studies of Waterloo, Gallipoli, Alamein, Agincourt, and Hattin—the battle Saladin won that enabled him to recapture Jerusalem from the Crusaders. The latest entry in this series focuses on the Battle of Culloden, which took place on…

Muddle Kingdom

Stephen Miller · September 9, 2016

What do Jean-Paul Sartre, André Malraux, Michel Foucault, and Roland Barthes have in common? These French writers admired Mao Zedong, the tyrant responsible for a famine in which 40-50 million people died. He was responsible, as well, for the Cultural Revolution, which had a death toll of around…

Life of a Salesman

Stephen Miller · December 11, 2015

When I first read Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, which many critics consider to be one of the greatest American plays, I was puzzled. "What's Willy Loman's problem?" I said to myself. He was not like any salesman I knew—and I knew many because my father was a salesman, and so were most of his…

Senior Services

Stephen Miller · September 7, 2015

In recent years, I’ve begun to worry that I should think more about aging. (I know, I know — everyone is aging, but the term only seems to be used for people over 60.) The Beatles wrote “When I’m Sixty-four,” but I am 74—older than a baby boomer—so it’s irresponsible of me to know so little about…

Miller’s Lament

Stephen Miller · June 8, 2015

When I sit down with old friends who, like me, are in their 70s, I sometimes ask: “If you could live your life again, would you do anything differently?” Most just scratch their heads and say, “I dunno.” Recently, I told three old friends that I would do one thing differently: I would get a middle…

Commerce and Art

Stephen Miller · July 1, 2013

John Kinsella, a highly regarded Australian poet who teaches at Cambridge, was quoted not long ago in the Times Literary Supplement as saying that he has “not sold his soul to market fetishization.” Kinsella means that he doesn’t want even to think about making a profit from his writing. But…

Manners in Disguise

Stephen Miller · November 14, 2011

My wife and I—we are in our early seventies—sit down in a local restaurant. After handing us menus, the waitress returns a few minutes later: “Are you guys ready to order?” she asks. The waitress, who is probably in her early twenties, could be my granddaughter, yet she calls us “guys.” A day later…

Rove Visits Duke

Stephen Miller · December 7, 2007

WHEN I HEARD KARL Rove was visiting Duke--where I'd spent the last four years as a student battling the hard left--it was only a matter of seconds before I was browsing expedia for a flight.