Author: Ceillie Clark-Keane

painting of the campus of Nichols College, with a myriad of brick buildings, a football field, and winding paths carved out from a surrounding, green forest

Compact Spaces and Relationships in Howards End and On Beauty

E.M. Forster’s novel is deeply concerned with compactly contained relationships, as well as the ideas and spaces that forge these connections. Zadie Smith’s modern-day retelling explores similarly contained personal relationships with a significant update: the book is set on a college campus.

A photo of someone walking on a beach and the photographer's fingers seeming to crush the person walking

“A Selfie as Big as the Ritz” and “The Diamond as Big as the Ritz”

By comparing a selfie to a hotel that stands tall and decadent in the cultural imagination, Lara Williams draws connections between the subtle themes of mapping, ownership, and value present in both her story and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s of a similar name—“The Diamond as Big as the Ritz.”