Writer
Courtney A. Fiske
Latest Content
Parallel Harvards
On bad days, my room, though perversely sized and thinly walled, offered refuge from the scrutiny of the clan.
Say Anything
As our emotional and existential stakes in the web have risen, so too have the damages that digital malevolence can wreak.
Bored at Harvard
If boredom is, after all, a symptom of modernity, we might as well accept that being bored is here to stay.
Really, Aaron Sorkin?
At least to current Harvard students, “The Social Network’s” repeated scenes of intoxicated depravity—culled from some “Animal-House”-meets-hip-New-York-club wet dream—serve as a not-so-subtle disclosure that Sorkin’s narrative attends more to fiction than fact.
Oh, the Irony!
As my short-lived attempt at abstinence revealed, living un-ironically is distinctly un-fun.
Period Politics
Menstruation, therein, is more than a biological occurrence: It is a socially constructed phenomenon, emanating as much from cultural stereotype as from women’s own wombs.
Laughing with Heidegger
Academic disciplines are forms of gibberish that must be mastered before they can glean any insights.
Situating Sex
As Beauvoir’s tombstone turns 24, her legacy—whether fully or pseudo feminist—commands our continued attention.
Viagra for Women?
Control over female sex should return to where it rightfully belongs: women themselves.
Our Resumes, Ourselves
Pressured to instrumentalize their educations for the sake of some bigger, better goal, Harvard students come to instrumentalize themselves.
Becoming Our ‘Best Selves’:
Imagistic distortion has become so normalized that unaltered photographs now run with special headlines, reinforcing the status of the non-airbrushed as an aberration.
Sex and the Sprinter
In destabilizing the sex-based division of sports, Semenya has destabilized the way in which we understand sex, gender, and ultimately ourselves.