Authority Essays

Cover of Authority Essays by Andrea Long Chu
Year: 2025
Language: en
Edition: 1
Pages: 288
ISBN-13: 9780374600334
Dimensions:
Height: 9 Inches
Length: 5.999988 Inches
Weight: 1.00089866948 pounds
Width: 0.999998 Inches
Editorial overview Touché

Authority Essays by Andrea Long Chu, published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux on April 8, 2025, is a collection of essays that explores the evolving landscape of criticism in contemporary society. In this edition, Chu, a Pulitzer Prize-winning critic, examines the role of criticism amidst a perceived crisis of authority, addressing topics ranging from musical theater to science fiction. The book features a tetralogy of personal essays originally published in the magazine n+1, showcasing Chu’s unique perspective as a public intellectual.

Readers will find a thought-provoking analysis of the intersection between politics and art, as Chu critiques complacency in contemporary criticism and challenges fellow critics to engage with pressing social issues. The essays offer a fresh intellectual history of criticism, tracing its political dimensions from the Enlightenment to the age of social media. Authority Essays invites readers to reconsider the purpose of criticism in light of current global challenges, including climate change and rising authoritarianism, while advocating for a more engaged and just approach to cultural discourse. This edition spans 288 pages and is presented in English.


Official synopsis Publisher

Many worry that criticism is suffering from a crisis of authority. In a world where everyone’s a critic, what is criticism for? Since her canonical 2018 essay “On Liking Women,” the Pulitzer Prize–winning critic Andrea Long Chu has established herself as a leading public intellectual and a bold cartographer of the new landscape of taste itself. Authority brings together sharp, illuminating essays on everything from musical theater to sci-fi novels, as well as an acclaimed tetralogy of personal essays first published in the magazine n+1. Throughout, Chu defies the imperative to leave politics out of art, charging fellow critics like Maggie Nelson and Zadie Smith with complacent humanism and modeling how the left might brave the culture wars with both its faculty of judgment and its sense of justice intact.

In two magisterial new essays, Chu offers a fresh intellectual history of criticism’s crisis of authority, tracing the surprisingly political contours of the discipline from its origins in the Enlightenment to our present age of social media. The desire to recover some lost authority, she argues, is neither new nor particularly freeing. Rather than being taken in by an endless cycle of trumped-up emergencies over the state of our culture, Authority makes a compelling case for how to do criticism in light of the actual crises, from climate change to rising authoritarianism, that confront us today.

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What is “Authority Essays” about?
This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Authority Essays” by Andrea Long Chu. Synopsis preview: Many worry that criticism is suffering from a crisis of authority. In a world where everyone’s a critic, what is criticism for? Since her canonical 2018 essay “On Liking Women,” the Pulitzer Prize–winning critic Andrea L…
Who is the author of “Authority Essays”?
“Authority Essays” is credited to Andrea Long Chu.
When was “Authority Essays” published?
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Year: 2025.
What is the ISBN for “Authority Essays”?
ISBN-13: 9780374600334.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 288. Edition: 1.

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