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Merve Emre head shot - The New Yorker

Merve Emre

Merve Emre is a contributing writer at The New Yorker and the Shapiro-Silverberg Professor of Creative Writing and Criticism at Wesleyan University. She is the author of “Paraliterary: The Making of Bad Readers in Postwar America,” “The Ferrante Letters,” and “The Personality Brokers: The Strange History of Myers-Briggs and the Birth of Personality Testing,” which was the basis for the documentary feature film “Persona.” She is the editor of the books “Once and Future Feminist,” “The Annotated Mrs. Dalloway,” and the Norton Library’s “Mrs. Dalloway.” In 2019, she was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize, and her work has been supported by the Whiting Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Leverhulme Trust, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin, where she was a fellow from 2020 to 2021.

The Afterlives of Susan Taubes

Her suicide, on the publication of her first novel, made her an icon of doomed femininity, but rediscovered works are revealing a more complex writer.

What Susan Sontag Wanted for Women

A new collection reveals a world view haunted by death—and the prospect of liberation.

The Worlds of Italo Calvino

Despite Calvino’s reputation as a postmodernist, his imagination was more in tune with pre-modern literary modes.

A Life Begun Amid the Ruins of a Syrian City

A baby rescued from the earthquake’s rubble was named Aya, meaning “a sign of God’s existence.” But what is the life ahead of her?

Has Academia Ruined Literary Criticism?

Literature departments seem to provide a haven for studying books, but they may have painted themselves into a corner.

Jon Fosse’s Search for Peace

The Norwegian author has spent decades producing a strange, revered body of work. But he still doesn’t know where the writing comes from.

The Reclusive Giant of Australian Letters

Gerald Murnane’s new book, billed as his last, surveys the rest of his output.

Cristina Rivera Garza’s Bodies Politic

Scrutinizing gender, history, and authority, the Mexican-born writer has found an unsettling yet playful way to write about desire.

Hito Steyerl’s Digital Visions

Her savage, mischievous works about surveillance, automation, digital platforms, and the art market have made her one of the most revered figures in the mercurial world of contemporary art. 

The Seductions of “Ulysses”

Since its publication, a century ago, James Joyce’s epic has acquired a fearsome reputation for difficulty. But its great subject, soppy as it may seem, is love.

Modernism’s Forgotten Mystic

In her short, tumultuous life, Mary Butts produced work admired by Bryher, Marianne Moore, and John Ashbery. Why isn’t she better known?

Diane Williams Will Never Be Dutiful

Williams can write startling things about sex, relationships, and family. But her real project is to test the limits of fiction itself.

Virginia Woolf’s Art of Character-Reading

Woolf believed that characters were a novelist’s greatest tool, a way to bridge life and fiction. In “Mrs. Dalloway,” she put her theory to the test.

Simone de Beauvoir’s Lost Novel of Early Love

Her passion for a doomed friend was so strong that Beauvoir wrote about it again and again.

A Japanese Novelist’s Tale of Bullying and Nietzsche

In Mieko Kawakami’s “Heaven,” everyday dilemmas provide a forum for examining fundamental questions of power and morality.

The Repressive Politics of Emotional Intelligence

Daniel Goleman’s pop-psychology blockbuster, now twenty-five years old, turned self-control into a corporate management tool.

How Leonora Carrington Feminized Surrealism

Each time the work of the British-Mexican artist and writer is reborn, it seems more prescient.

Our Love-Hate Relationship with Gimmicks

Why is the same word used to describe the harmless enchantments of literary technique and the cruel buffoonery of contemporary political and economic life?

The Injustices of Aging

The women in Sigrid Nunez’s latest novel confront the indignities of their declining years.

The Afterlives of Susan Taubes

Her suicide, on the publication of her first novel, made her an icon of doomed femininity, but rediscovered works are revealing a more complex writer.

What Susan Sontag Wanted for Women

A new collection reveals a world view haunted by death—and the prospect of liberation.

The Worlds of Italo Calvino

Despite Calvino’s reputation as a postmodernist, his imagination was more in tune with pre-modern literary modes.

A Life Begun Amid the Ruins of a Syrian City

A baby rescued from the earthquake’s rubble was named Aya, meaning “a sign of God’s existence.” But what is the life ahead of her?

Has Academia Ruined Literary Criticism?

Literature departments seem to provide a haven for studying books, but they may have painted themselves into a corner.

Jon Fosse’s Search for Peace

The Norwegian author has spent decades producing a strange, revered body of work. But he still doesn’t know where the writing comes from.

The Reclusive Giant of Australian Letters

Gerald Murnane’s new book, billed as his last, surveys the rest of his output.

Cristina Rivera Garza’s Bodies Politic

Scrutinizing gender, history, and authority, the Mexican-born writer has found an unsettling yet playful way to write about desire.

Hito Steyerl’s Digital Visions

Her savage, mischievous works about surveillance, automation, digital platforms, and the art market have made her one of the most revered figures in the mercurial world of contemporary art. 

The Seductions of “Ulysses”

Since its publication, a century ago, James Joyce’s epic has acquired a fearsome reputation for difficulty. But its great subject, soppy as it may seem, is love.

Modernism’s Forgotten Mystic

In her short, tumultuous life, Mary Butts produced work admired by Bryher, Marianne Moore, and John Ashbery. Why isn’t she better known?

Diane Williams Will Never Be Dutiful

Williams can write startling things about sex, relationships, and family. But her real project is to test the limits of fiction itself.

Virginia Woolf’s Art of Character-Reading

Woolf believed that characters were a novelist’s greatest tool, a way to bridge life and fiction. In “Mrs. Dalloway,” she put her theory to the test.

Simone de Beauvoir’s Lost Novel of Early Love

Her passion for a doomed friend was so strong that Beauvoir wrote about it again and again.

A Japanese Novelist’s Tale of Bullying and Nietzsche

In Mieko Kawakami’s “Heaven,” everyday dilemmas provide a forum for examining fundamental questions of power and morality.

The Repressive Politics of Emotional Intelligence

Daniel Goleman’s pop-psychology blockbuster, now twenty-five years old, turned self-control into a corporate management tool.

How Leonora Carrington Feminized Surrealism

Each time the work of the British-Mexican artist and writer is reborn, it seems more prescient.

Our Love-Hate Relationship with Gimmicks

Why is the same word used to describe the harmless enchantments of literary technique and the cruel buffoonery of contemporary political and economic life?

The Injustices of Aging

The women in Sigrid Nunez’s latest novel confront the indignities of their declining years.