All posts tagged: Walter

Can the Historical Materialist Be a Woman? On the Woman Question in Walter Benjamin

Can the Historical Materialist Be a Woman? On the Woman Question in Walter Benjamin

Image provided by smith. This year I agreed to be a part of a translation project: alongside two fellow academics, the aim was to translate the fifty-something page Walter Benjamin essay, “Eduard Fuchs, collector and historian.” An issue soon arose concerning whether or not we should change the pronouns—which in the essay is usually “he”—to the gender-neutral “they.” I had initially suggested this change without giving it much thought. Another translator did not agree with my view that this was a relatively harmless change, rather insisting that we ought to maintain the translation of the pronoun as “he,” citing the necessity of “fidelity to the text.” To his mind, if this word was what was on the page, then we had to translate it as literally as possible: a one-to-one match. Translation must be free of interpretation, since interpretation is subjective, and subjectivity is, my colleague seemed to express, a bad word in the world of translation. I thought at the time, and still do, that this seemed a little odd considering how much of …

Trump to get ‘routine annual’ medical exam at Walter Reed : NPR

Trump to get ‘routine annual’ medical exam at Walter Reed : NPR

President Donald Trump departs after speaking during the 158th National Memorial Day Observance coinciding with the nation’s 250th anniversary, at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Arlington, Va. Alex Brandon/AP hide caption toggle caption Alex Brandon/AP WASHINGTON — President Trump has a doctor’s appointment on Tuesday. The visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center will be Trump’s third in 13 months — a frequency that’s raised concerns about his health. The White House announced the “routine annual dental and medical assessment” two weeks ago and characterized it as a “part of his regular preventive health care.” Trump, who turns 80 years old in June, is the oldest person to take the oath of office and he is the second oldest president in U.S. history after President Joe Biden. His age, swollen ankles and bruised hands have sparked repeated questions about the president’s health and fitness. Trump’s last annual physical examination was in April of last year. Shortly after, the President told reporters he “aced” the cognitive test and …

Trump to visit Walter Reed for the third checkup of his second term

Trump to visit Walter Reed for the third checkup of his second term

President Donald Trump plans to go to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Tuesday for a medical and dental checkup, according to a White House official. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. This is the president’s third in-person doctor’s visit in a little over a year. He went to Walter Reed twice last year, in April and October. He also visited his dentist in West Palm Beach twice this year — first in January and then again earlier this month for a follow-up. Trump, who will turn 80 next month and is the oldest person to assume the presidency, routinely asserts that he is in excellent health, even as rumors about his health circulate. He made his promised vitality and energy a major part of his campaign for re-election, mocking his rival as “Sleepy Joe Biden.” But moments of apparent drowsiness and a noticeably bruised hand, which the White House has blamed on him shaking hands and taking aspirin as a blood thinner, continue to …

Walter Benjamin Explains How Fascism Uses Mass Media to Turn Politics Into Spectacle (1935)

Walter Benjamin Explains How Fascism Uses Mass Media to Turn Politics Into Spectacle (1935)

Image via Wiki­me­dia Com­mons In his 1935 essay, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechan­i­cal Repro­ducibil­i­ty,” influ­en­tial Ger­man-Jew­ish crit­ic Wal­ter Ben­jamin intro­duced the term “aura” to describe an authen­tic expe­ri­ence of art. Aura relates to the phys­i­cal prox­im­i­ty between objects and their view­ers. Its loss, Ben­jamin argued, was a dis­tinct­ly 20th-cen­tu­ry phe­nom­e­non caused by mass media’s impo­si­tion of dis­tance between object and view­er, though it appears to bring art clos­er through a sim­u­la­tion of inti­ma­cy. The essay makes for potent read­ing today. Mass media — which for Ben­jamin meant radio, pho­tog­ra­phy, and film — turns us all into poten­tial actors, crit­ics, experts, he wrote, and takes art out of the realm of the sacred and into the realm of the spec­ta­cle. Yet it retains the pre­tense of rit­u­al. We make offer­ings to cults of per­son­al­i­ty, expand­ed in our time to include influ­encers and revered and reviled bil­lion­aires and polit­i­cal fig­ures who joust in the head­lines like pro­fes­sion­al wrestlers, led around by the chief of all heels. As Ben­jamin writes: The film responds to …

Parent Trap stars Elaine Hendrix and Lisa Ann Walter open up about potential sequel

Parent Trap stars Elaine Hendrix and Lisa Ann Walter open up about potential sequel

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter The Parent Trap actors Elaine Hendrix and Lisa Ann Walter have shared their response to fan speculation about a sequel to the sister-swapping Disney classic. Hendrix and Walter — who played evil girlfriend Meredith Blake and eccentric housekeeper Chessy, respectively— became best friends while filming the hit 1998 remake and have stayed close ever since. The pair previously revealed that they would be on board for returning to their beloved roles — but now, they have confessed they know nothing about any plans for a reboot. “That’s a Disney question,” Walter, 62, told Us Weekly when asked about the chances of a sequel. Hendrix, 55, added, “Above our pay grade.” Walter and Hendrix, whose friendship was featured on the magazine’s Galentine’s Day issue for February, went on to theorize about what their characters would be up to in a sequel film. …

Why Engineer Walter Bradley (1943-2025) Still Matters

Why Engineer Walter Bradley (1943-2025) Still Matters

When Walter Bradley passed away at age 81, the scientific and faith communities lost a rare figure: a man who combined first-rate engineering, intellectual courage, and a deep concern for human flourishing. His legacy remains alive and thriving. On ID the Future, Andrew McDiarmid, talked to Robert J. Marks about Bradley’s life, work, and enduring influence. What emerged was not merely a résumé of achievements, but the portrait of a man who “lived wall to wall,” integrating science, faith, and service with remarkable consistency. Bradley was a trailblazer in the modern intelligent design movement, most notably as a coauthor of The Mystery of Life’s Origin, (1984), alongside Charles Thaxton and Roger Olsen. A profound question in science The book tackled one of the most profound questions in science: how life could arise from nonlife? Rather than promoting a religious argument, the authors carefully examined prevailing chemical evolutionary theories and showed their deep explanatory gaps. In a telling departure from a common practice, Bradley insisted the book be published through a secular press and written for …