The Last Professor
Bill Kolbrener is the Executive Director of Writing on the Wall and, reluctantly, the last professor. Formed by an education that no longer exists and teaching in a world that no longer reads, he writes about what we must preserve — reading, interpretation, and the fragile human voice that refuses to become machine-made.
Tick–Tock: The Hope of the Hopeless
The Jewish optimism of hopelessness – kiviti – the hope that remains after all hope is lost.
Read MoreWhiplash: Between Mourning and Celebration
The line between collective grief and celebration has become so thin that it is difficult to distinguish one from the other.
Read MoreBa’avor Zeh – For this Moment, Now
From degradation to triumph, from idolatry to the one God, from slavery to freedom, we first remember and retell.
Read MoreBetween the Sirens: Now Accepting Submissions
Be a literary witness from wherever you are. We are seeking creative responses - poetry, artwork, and essays - to the uncertainty of today. Click here to check out the series!
Read MoreWhy I Didn’t Cancel Milton
A few weeks ago, I wrote about a class trip to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Muslim, Christian, and Jewish students moved easily through a shared historical space, speaking from within their traditions without defensiveness...
Read More10th of Tevet
Explore the meaning behind the Tenth of Tevet. The fast does not mourn the moment the walls fell, but the moment the city was cut off economically, politically, and spiritually.
Read MoreHanukkah: Reading the Signs
Remember when assimilation was the greatest threat to the Jewish people? Those were the good old days.
Read MoreCall Me Carol
In Pluribus, Vince Gilligan’s new series, a zombie hive-mind becomes a mirror for our own slow drift toward machine thinking.
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