An Ottoman dragoman in robe and fur hat, reading a scroll — period costume plate
Edition 14 · 6 June 2026 · archive ›

Dragoman

the world, interpreted
Focus: Africa · Central Asia & Pacific — 12 items · 6 native-language exclusives. Structural over breaking; the forgotten over the front page.
Many views on one question

AI and the loss of distinctive advantage

A Norwegian literary essay and an American defense analysis both ask what remains proprietary or recognizably human once AI systems absorb and reproduce patterns. One worries about style becoming a tell; the other about military logic becoming harvestable through public frontier models.

Another question, several views

modernity as domination and capture

A French, Norwegian, Italian and Turkish set of essays reads modern life less as progress than as a machinery of conquest, mass irrationality, capitalist absorption and authoritarian wreckage. What divides them is where they locate the damage: colonial foundations, the modern subject, countercultural economies, or neoliberal ruins.

De
Geschichte der Gegenwart · Global

Demokratische Selbstsorge?

Democracy is treated here not merely as an institutional arrangement but as the condition under which care and self-care can become socially possible. By putting Foucault-adjacent ideas of Selbstsorge into conversation with democratic life, the essay reframes politics as the infrastructure of attention, dependency, and repair.

read in German, untranslated · 12d ago · 11 min · deep · opened — expand

A conceptually strong German-language piece that turns a fashionable ethic of care into a demanding theory of political form.

democracycarepolitical philosophy
En
Noema · Global

What Might The Next Axial Age Look Like?

The next “axial age” is imagined not as another civilizational miracle but as a crisis in the forms by which humans make meaning together. The likely force of the essay is its long historical scale: AI, planetary interdependence and institutional exhaustion appear less as news than as symptoms of a deeper metaphysical reorganization.

English original · yesterday · 4 min · deep · opened — expand

Noema is at its best when it gives contemporary anxiety a civilizational frame rather than another trend label.

civilizationtechnologymeaning
En
Noema · Global

To Understand AI, Think Like A Dragonfly

Instead of treating artificial intelligence through the exhausted metaphors of minds, gods or machines, the essay asks what becomes visible if we begin with the dragonfly: perception as embodied, selective, fast and world-bound. That biological analogy promises a better conceptual grammar for intelligence than the usual human exceptionalism versus automation panic.

English original · 16d ago · 17 min · deep · opened — expand

A good reframing piece: the value is not the AI news but the change of metaphor.

AIcognitionbiology
En
Eurozine · Global

When is bullshit real bullshit?

Frankfurt’s famous definition of bullshit as indifference to reality is reopened as a moral and epistemic problem rather than a comic taxonomy. The sharper question is whether bullshit may be more corrosive than lying because it dissolves the shared obligation to care what truth is.

English original · 11d ago · 11 min · deep · opened — expand

A compact philosophical essay on a word everyone uses and too few still think through.

philosophytruthpublic discourse
Es
Revista de Libros · Global

La plenitud digital. Entrevista con Jay David Bolter

Jay David Bolter’s “digital plenitude” names a culture no longer organized by scarcity of media forms but by their endless multiplication, remixing and mutual contamination. The interview likely matters as media theory rather than tech commentary: it asks how authorship, attention and cultural memory change when every medium becomes an environment for every other.

read in Spanish, untranslated · 18d ago · deep · opened — expand

A Spanish-language theoretical conversation likely to reward a reader interested in learning, media and cognition.

media theorydigital cultureattention
It
Il Tascabile · Global

Sull’eguaglianza di tutte le cose di Carlo Rovelli

Rovelli’s idea of the equality of all things invites a philosophical reading of physics as an assault on hierarchy: objects, relations and observers cease to occupy the old metaphysical ranks. The Italian essay likely turns popular science into ontology, asking what kind of world remains when matter is no longer arranged around human privilege.

read in Italian, untranslated · 15d ago · 11 min · deep · opened — expand

Il Tascabile is a strong home for science read as intellectual history, not as fact delivery.

physicsphilosophyRovelli
Da
Passage · Global

Anmeldelse af Jens Bjerring-Hansen og Lasse Horne Kjældgaard (red.): Georg Brandes’ Main Currents: A Companion

A review of a companion to Georg Brandes’ Main Currents should reopen the nineteenth-century project of comparative literature as a political and intellectual technology. Brandes matters here not as a museum figure but as a model of how ideas move across languages, publics and national self-images.

read in Danish, untranslated · 107d ago · 1 min · deep · opened — expand

For a Scandinavian polyglot, this is a native-near intellectual history piece with unusually good meta-relevance.

intellectual historycomparative literatureBrandes
En
International Crisis Group · Global

Tiny Djibouti, and Its Prime Real Estate

Djibouti is presented not as a miniature footnote to great-power strategy but as a small state with unusually dense geopolitical real estate. Its ports, bases and Red Sea position make it a lesson in how weak-looking states can survive by arbitraging rivalry, geography and diplomatic ambiguity.

English original · skim · opened — expand

A focused Horn of Africa lens on sovereignty under pressure, more valuable than another Red Sea crisis explainer.

DjiboutiHorn of Africageopolitics
En
LRB Blog · Global

Hal Foster: At MoMA

Hal Foster uses Duchamp’s continuing ubiquity at MoMA to ask why the readymade still structures contemporary art’s imagination more than fifty years after its canonization. The likely argument is less exhibition review than diagnosis: avant-garde negation has become museum grammar.

English original · 15d ago · 12 min · deep · opened — expand

Foster is one of the few critics who can make institutional art history feel like a theory of the present.

art criticismDuchampmuseums
En
asiatimes.com · Central Asia & Pacific

How Pacific islands can gain from Australia-Japan ties

Pacific island states appear here not simply as passive recipients of Australian or Japanese security policy but as actors able to extract maritime, disaster and infrastructure gains from regional alignment. The piece’s value lies in reading the Pacific as a strategic subject, not just a theatre of China anxiety.

English original · 4d ago · 5 min · skim · opened — expand

It serves this week’s Pacific focus and offers a non-US frame on island agency, even if likely more policy analysis than literary essay.

PacificJapanregional security
Es
Letras Libres · Global

Sonny Rollins, el último gigante del saxofón

Sonny Rollins is framed as the last giant not only because of virtuosity but because his improvisational force embodied a particular moral and aesthetic idea of modern jazz. The Spanish essay likely reads his sound as a form of abundance: impulsive, torrential, disciplined by freedom rather than opposed to it.

read in Spanish, untranslated · yesterday · 5 min · skim · opened — expand

A good cultural essay can make music criticism into a theory of artistic presence.

jazzmusic criticismSonny Rollins
No
Vagant · Global

Venedigbiennalen 2026 Stille stemmer og pink aktioner

The Venice Biennale is read through quiet voices and pink actions: minor-key aesthetics that refuse the assumption that political art must announce itself loudly. The piece likely asks how softness, understatement and marginal tonalities can still carry institutional critique.

read in Norwegian, untranslated · 19d ago · 9 min · skim · opened — expand

A Nordic art-critical vantage, and a useful counterweight to anglophone spectacle criticism.

Venice Biennaleart criticismpolitics of form