Photo caption Ballerinas adorn the window of the School of American Ballet, started by the Russian-turned-American choreographer, George Balanchine. Alfred Eisenstaedt, The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty Images January/February 2016 Volume 37, Issue 1 SUBSCRIBE FOR HUMANITIES MAGAZINE PRINT EDITION Browse all issues Sign up for HUMANITIES Magazine newsletter Also in this issue The Man Who Made American Modernism and Modernism American James Laughlin, champion of literature Greg Barnhisel My Own Private Williamsburg A writer goes in search of W.A.R. Goodwin Andrew Reiner The Humanities Are More Economical What Teaching Political Philosophy and Efficiency Have to Do with Each Other. Danielle Allen The Grown-Up Saint-Exupéry The Little Prince author, a famous pilot, wrote for adults too. Meredith Hindley The Birth of Rock ‘n’ Roll Is Found at Sam Phillips’s Sun Records Anyone could walk in and record their song at small studio in Memphis. Laura Wolff Scanlan In the Land of Snow and Fargo, a Legacy of Black Writing Emerges A new anthology of African-American writing reveals black lives in the Midwest. Jael Goldfine Dumbarton House in Georgetown Obliged Washington, D.C.’s Expanding Street Grid in 1915 by Moving a Few Hundred Feet Steve Moyer Curioldy First in a series: Revisiting the Spring 1971 issue of Humanities David Skinner Papa Wheelie Hemingway on a bicycle Steve Moyer Impertinent Questions with Alan Kahan Tocqueville is still trenchant. Anna Maria Gillis Briann Greenfield of the New Jersey Council for the Humanities She takes a public historian's view of the world. Mary Jo Patterson Editor’s Note David Skinner
The Man Who Made American Modernism and Modernism American James Laughlin, champion of literature Greg Barnhisel
The Humanities Are More Economical What Teaching Political Philosophy and Efficiency Have to Do with Each Other. Danielle Allen
The Grown-Up Saint-Exupéry The Little Prince author, a famous pilot, wrote for adults too. Meredith Hindley
The Birth of Rock ‘n’ Roll Is Found at Sam Phillips’s Sun Records Anyone could walk in and record their song at small studio in Memphis. Laura Wolff Scanlan
In the Land of Snow and Fargo, a Legacy of Black Writing Emerges A new anthology of African-American writing reveals black lives in the Midwest. Jael Goldfine
Dumbarton House in Georgetown Obliged Washington, D.C.’s Expanding Street Grid in 1915 by Moving a Few Hundred Feet Steve Moyer
Briann Greenfield of the New Jersey Council for the Humanities She takes a public historian's view of the world. Mary Jo Patterson