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What We Are Reading Today: Goethe: A Life in Ideas by Matthew Bell

What We Are Reading Today: Goethe: A Life in Ideas by Matthew Bell
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Updated 38 sec ago

What We Are Reading Today: Goethe: A Life in Ideas by Matthew Bell

What We Are Reading Today: Goethe: A Life in Ideas by Matthew Bell

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832) was a poet, a novelist, a scientist and an essayist on a dizzying range of topics. 
In the 19th century, he was widely regarded as one of the most important thinkers of modern Europe. In this important and ambitious work, Matthew Bell offers a wide-ranging intellectual biography of Goethe, tracing the evolution of his thought and reassessing its value.
Bell examines the full spectrum of Goethe’s writing, from his most well-known works, including the dramatic poem “Faust” and the novels “Wilhelm Meister” and “The Sorrows of Young Werther,” to lesser-known essays and reviews.
Throughout, Bell draws on Goethe’s letters and diaries, most of which are still only available in German, embedding Goethe’s thought in his lived experience and in the cultural and intellectual life of Europe from the 1750s to the 1830s.


Book Review: ‘Algospeak: How Social Media is Transforming the Future of Language’

Book Review: ‘Algospeak: How Social Media is Transforming the Future of Language’
Updated 12 September 2025

Book Review: ‘Algospeak: How Social Media is Transforming the Future of Language’

Book Review: ‘Algospeak: How Social Media is Transforming the Future of Language’
  • Adam Aleksic examines substitutions and coded phrases used online to bypass censorship, from PG-rated or silly alternatives to fruit emojis and dollar signs replacing letters

In “Algospeak: How Social Media is Transforming the Future of Language,” author Adam Aleksic explores how algorithms are reshaping the words we use and the ways in which we communicate.

Known online as “Etymology Nerd,” the Harvard-educated content creator, who co-founded and led the Harvard Undergraduate Linguistics Society, has been digging into word origins since 2016. He has built a wide audience with his bite-sized educational TikTok videos which explain where trending words come from and how they spread.

The term “algospeak” blends “algorithm” with a concept popularized by tech journalist and fellow book author Taylor Lorenz, describing how creators adapt language to avoid platform restrictions.

“Social media platforms want to promote the most compelling content possible so it makes sense that the words will reach us through maximally compelling mediums, like memes rather than something more serious. ‘Unalive’ is far more likely to spread today than boring traditional alternatives, such as ‘passed away’,” Aleksic writes.

The word “unalive” illustrates how online language quickly filters into offline spaces, from middle school classrooms to playgrounds, often boosted by memes. Aleksic notes: “Language and memes and metadata are one and the same, all of it shaping our vocabulary and identities.”

Fleeting words used by teens may may sound like gibberish to adult ears, but they are still worthy of note even if they are merely trendy for a short amount of time, he argues. It helps us figure out who we are, what we are talking about and how we see ourselves — even if by the time you read this review, new words have come and gone.

Aleksic examines substitutions and coded phrases used online to bypass censorship, from PG-rated or silly alternatives to fruit emojis and dollar signs replacing letters.

This isn’t new. Teenagers have long softened words and code-switched in front of authority figures in everyday speech, but now these shifts are documented, amplified and collectively adopted online.

This chronically online generation uses the language to playfully and strategically avoid shadow banning or content removal — including in high-stakes contexts such as posts about the conflict in Gaza. It works.

This is not the death of language, Aleksic insists, but its evolution. Memes, emojis and subtle code words show how communities collectively and creatively innovate, creating words and phrases in real time while navigating the constraints of platforms. “Algospeak” reveals language as a living, evolving system, shaped by algorithms, culture and the people who use it.
 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Football’ by Etienne Ghys

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Football’ by Etienne Ghys
Updated 11 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Football’ by Etienne Ghys

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Football’ by Etienne Ghys

“The Football” takes readers on an entertaining and fact-filled exploration of the mathematical secrets of the most popular spherical object on the planet. The football is familiar to billions of fans across the globe, but how many really look at it? Do footballs all have the same shape? Spoiler: not exactly. How does their shape affect how they play? With Etienne Ghys as our guide, we discover why ballistics, friction, and air flow are key to scoring goals—and why the football is a mathematical problem that engineers are still trying to solve.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Global City’ by Saskia Sassen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Global City’ by Saskia Sassen
Updated 10 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Global City’ by Saskia Sassen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Global City’ by Saskia Sassen

In her classic book “The Global City,” Saskia Sassen tells how New York, London, and Tokyo became command centers of the emerging global economy and, in the process, underwent massive and parallel changes.

The book reorients the way we think about how cities shape and are shaped by globalization and provides lessons for the future.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Insect Architecture’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Insect Architecture’
Updated 09 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Insect Architecture’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Insect Architecture’

Authors: Tom Jackson And Michael S. Engel

“Insect Architecture” takes you inside the amazing structures that insects build, from the paper galleries of yellow jacket wasps to elaborate termite mounds complete with royal chambers and air-conditioning systems.

Each chapter focuses on a group of insect architects, describing the materials and methods they use while exploring the structures themselves in detail.

Blending spectacular illustrations with illuminating case studies of representative species from around the world, this is the ultimate guide to insect artistry and innovation.


What We Are Reading Today: The Border by Diarmaid Ferriter

What We Are Reading Today: The Border by Diarmaid Ferriter
Updated 08 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: The Border by Diarmaid Ferriter

What We Are Reading Today: The Border by Diarmaid Ferriter

This book will help you understand why the Brexit issue is so intractable, saying that it has always been the ordinary people of Northern Ireland who have paid the price. They deserve better.

The border has been a topic of dispute for over a century, first in Dublin, Belfast and Westminster and, post Brexit referendum, in Brussels. 

Yet, despite the passions of Nationalists and Unionists in the North, neither found deep wells of support in the countries they identified with politically. 

The writer reveals the political, economic, social and cultural consequences of the border in Ireland.

The book is a timely intervention by a renowned historian into one of the most misunderstood issues of our time, according to a review on goodreads.com.