What We Are Reading Today: The Lives of Literature: Reading, Teaching, Knowing by Arnold Weinstein

Short Url
Updated 14 January 2022
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: The Lives of Literature: Reading, Teaching, Knowing by Arnold Weinstein

Why do we read literature? For Arnold Weinstein, the answer is clear: Literature allows us to become someone else.

Literature changes us by giving us intimate access to an astonishing variety of other lives, experiences, and places across the ages.

Reflecting on a lifetime of reading, teaching, and writing, The Lives of Literature explores, with passion, humor, and whirring intellect, a professor’s life, the thrills and traps of teaching, and, most of all, the power of literature to lead us to a deeper understanding of ourselves and the worlds we inhabit.

As an identical twin, Weinstein experienced early the dislocation of being mistaken for another person— and of feeling that he might be someone other than he had thought.


What We Are Reading Today: Invisible Hands by Margaret S. Graves

Updated 14 February 2026
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: Invisible Hands by Margaret S. Graves

In the heyday of Islamic art collecting around the turn of the 20th century, thousands of premodern ceramic objects circulated on the international antiquities market. 

“Invisible Hands” tells the story of how traditional craft skills of the Islamic world, often thought to have died out with the advent of industrialization, were redirected toward a thriving new market in the colonial era: the fabrication and fictionalizing of antiquities, especially ceramics.

In this stunning work of art history, Margaret Graves shakes the foundations of the discipline, challenging us to reconsider what is and is not art.