Denying the reality of old age, we too often fail to profit from its invaluable lessons.
The Kinsey agenda remains alive as key justifications for counting up sexual acts.
An Modern Language Association (MLA) study calling for curricular reform that addresses the need for increased language instruction and incorporates cultural and historical reflection.
Analyses of ghostwritten articles shows them to both exaggerate effectiveness and downplay adverse effects.
The corporation has never entirely escaped entanglement in matters of good and bad, right and wrong.
Youth culture is an invention of modernity. It has not always been with us.
What do we mean when we say that humans have dignity?
The past is not, of course, one thing; there are many pasts, and they are continually being rewritten.
The idea of “public intellectuals” elicits two responses that are fundamentally opposed.
Home evokes identity, family, comfort, domesticity, privacy, space, the past.
With the publication of our first special issue, some words of explanation are in order.
This issue of The Hedgehog Review explores what is at stake in the encroachment of commodification into almost every aspect of life.
Want to know more? Here are some places to start.
Can pragmatism free us from the swing between the absolute and the arbitrary?
Our thinking about the body is simply not keeping pace with the complex technological, economic, and social pressures imposed upon the body.
A question like “What’s the university for?” only makes sense in a time of rapid societal transformation.
This is not just a matter of theory or of what academics say about identity; it also concerns how people experience themselves in daily life at the end of the twentieth century.
Identities—what are they good for?