3/15/2023 0 Comments Highbrow courses![]() ![]() Below are some of the courses I took in the last few weeks.Įlevate your knowledge, broaden your horizons Highbrow has something for everyone, currently there are 93 courses, and more are added regularly by industry leaders. The only hitch is you can only enroll in one lesson at a time focus your energy on mastering one topic at a time to avoid running out of fuel. Highbrow offers free 10 day courses, which appear in your inbox at opportune times, once a day, and only require 5 minutes or less to read and learn. Learn about a range of topics, ranging from philosophy to architecture, and from ideas that changed the world to tips on how to write well. The material is light, fun, and informative, and best of all, easily consumed in only 5 minutes. Anything else: editorsthedriftmagcom.Ĭlick here to read the official guidelines of the Call for Submissions and Pitches by The Drift.Get smarter with mini lessons sent to your inbox everyday.Direct customer service queries to: infothedriftmagcom. ![]() The best Mentions have a clear, narrow angle, make a few jokes, and land on a punchy kicker. In the email body, include your name, relevant clips, and a draft of the review, which should be 1-4 sentences. Poetry SubmissionsĪttach up to six poems in a single Word doc or pdf titled “lastname_firstname”. Fiction SubmissionsĪttach your work (no word limit) as a Word doc or pdf titled “lastname_firstname”. They read and respond to every pitch they receive, so bear with them-it may take a bit of time to get back to you, but they will. They work on essays often over the course of many months and several drafts, and they like to begin with a two- to four-paragraph pitch. Unfortunately, they’re not able to read draft nonfiction submissions. *These figures are according to the exchange rates at the time of writing this article. Your love life quarantine diaries Twitter feuds whatever’s on Netflix baking cultural appropriation woke Hollywood the “meritocracy,” and ivory tower critiques of meritocracy wellness Harry Potter as political intertext friendly brands performative pessimism girlbosses refusing to read David Foster Wallace David Foster Wallace consumer guilt the political and psychological effects of social media millennials and sex cable news lifestyle choices contemporary fiction freedom. What The Drift Doesn’t WantĪnything that toes a party line (any party, any line) highbrow name-dropping straightforward longform reviews narrowly focused on a single book or movie dispatches from The Right Side of History finger wagging false binaries anachronistic historical critiques thoughts on Heidegger, Nietzsche, Foucault, hot takes on the latest 24-hour Twitter scandal term papers (or anything that could conceivably be turned in as a term paper) Marxist critiques culminating in statements about the base and superstructure personal essays. Socially engaged cultural criticism class-sensitive analysis pieces that point out what’s being avoided or talked around in politics, media, arts, or even academia upbeat cynicism un-self-serious screeds generous takedowns entries from the margins fiction poetry 1-3 sentence book/movie/TV/art reviews. Submission and Pitching Guidelines What The Drift Wants In the words of The New York Times, The Drift is “the lit mag of the moment”. The Drift is a magazine of culture and politics. Submit your ideas and get published with them! About The Drift The Drift is inviting submissions and pitches from writers on a rolling basis. ![]()
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