What We Are Reading Today: Agents of Change 

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Updated 06 July 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Agents of Change 

Author: Christina Hillsberg

Christina Hillsberg’s “Agents of Change” deftly tackles not just the fight for gender equality at the Cia, but the current dilemma the agency faces when dealing with the culmination of a decades-long culture of sexual harassment and assault.

In the book, Hillsberg pays a long overdue tribute to the survivors and thrivers, the indispensable groundbreakers, and defiant rabble-rousers who made the choice to change their lives and in turn, changed history.


What We Are Reading Today: Making Waste by Sophie Gee

Updated 1 min 13 sec ago
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What We Are Reading Today: Making Waste by Sophie Gee

Why was 18th-century English culture so fascinated with the things its society discarded? Why did Restoration and Augustan writers such as Milton, Dryden, Swift, and Pope describe, catalog, and memorialize the waste matter that their social and political worlds wanted to get rid of—from the theological dregs in “Paradise Lost” to the excrements in “The Lady’s Dressing Room” and the corpses of “A Journal of the Plague Year?” In “Making Waste,” the first book about refuse and its place in Enlightenment literature and culture, Sophie Gee examines the meaning of waste at the moment when the early modern world was turning modern.

Gee explains how English writers used contemporary theological and philosophical texts about unwanted and leftover matter to explore secular, literary relationships between waste and value. She finds that, in the 18th century, waste was as culturally valuable as it was practically worthless—and that waste paradoxically revealed the things that the culture cherished most.