Culture | Insurgent history
How do radicals find each other—and get heard?
Gal Beckerman offers some answers in “The Quiet Before”
The Quiet Before. By Gal Beckerman. Crown; 352 pages; $28.99. Bantam Press; £20
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Small voices, big ideas”
Culture February 12th 2022
- The strange tenderness of Michel Houellebecq’s new novel
- To understand China, says Megan Walsh, turn to its literature
- Rachel Jones is an artist of the moment
- How do radicals find each other—and get heard?
- “Columbo” shows the benefits of asking just one more thing
- A language without a flag and a state is still a language
More from Culture
Design an Economist cover
Test your design skills
Ovation inflation has spread from Broadway to London’s West End
Why do dud plays get standing ovations?
Are mystics kooks or valuable disrupters?
A realist’s refreshing take on mysticism
Sex and Snow White: how Grimm should children’s books be?
The German authors suggest very, but today trends run the opposite way
Jimmy Lai’s trial is a headline-worthy example of injustice
A new biography aims to keep the public’s attention on the pro-democracy tycoon
Millennials and Gen Z are falling hard for stuffed animals
Plushies are cute, cuddly and costly