Literature Desiring literature with Nate Lippens and Kate Zambreno Following Semiotext(e)‘s release of Lippens’s ‘Ripcord’ and ‘My Dead Book,’ the authors trace consciousnesses of queerness and class through both novels and friendships
“What we habitually see confirms us. Yet it can happen, suddenly, unexpectedly.” Photographer Pegah Farahmand and fashion editor Dogukan Nesanir collaborate on this fashion portfolio for Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue
“To remain innocent may also be to remain ignorant.” Photographer Rodrigo Carmuega and fashion editor Laetitia Leporq collaborate on this fashion portfolio for Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue
“All photographs are there to remind us of what we forget” For Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, Sam Penn photographs some of her closest friends and collaborators near and far on Fire Island and on FaceTime screens
Above the Fold Why are the attacks on the march for our lives so laughable? Conservative America is in a panic. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold A New York City bill aims to protect a worker’s right to ‘disconnect’ A bill filed by City Councilman Rafael L. Espinal would require companies with more than ten employees to refrain from off-hour communications. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Uber fatality highlights the plight of the American pedestrian The tragedy in Arizona took place at the intersection of economic inequality and urban planning's long-standing apathy for pedestrians. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Imagining the end of Facebook, for the first time As the Cambridge Analytica revelations widen, the company's demise no longer seems like a fantastical possibility. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold On Loan: An observation on life in a British prison Document spoke with an archivist with England's Mass Observation Unit about a special artifact on life in one of the country's oldest prisons. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Is Germaine Greer’s clear-eyed approach to #MeToo actually controversial? The prominent feminist author of 'The Female Eunuch' is thought to be against the #MeToo movement, yet a close reading of her words portrays an... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Why does Facebook keep trying to censor artwork with nudity in France of all places? The platform has found itself in the past weeks waging cultural battles with several French users over the use of nudity in works of art,... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The inner architectural voice of the city” Los Angeles now has a design Czar, it turns out humans began innovating much earlier in history than assume, and the Vatican comes clean about... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An enchanted world now exists alongside the disenchanted one” Half of the world's wildlife may be gone in the next century, the devil is trending, and listening to your favorite song while studying isn't... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Learning tools for young surgeons” The iPhone may be a brain surgeon's best friend, meet the Cobalt Cowboy, and were Hubert de Givenchy and Audrey Hepburn the original influencers? by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “No deference to a good looking face” Wearing makeup may come at cost for women in leadership roles, Leonardo Da Vinci's notes on urban planning may be of use today, and DJ... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Living in the loudest cities” A survey of noise pollution across the world, the Frida Kahlo Barbie Doll is problematic, and Russia now legally recognizes contemporary art. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “To dabble in the occult of orange” There is a toxic history to the pigment that makes the color orange, a shanty-town is home to the thriving Ugandan film industry, and is... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A bath in radioactive water” Doctors in the Czech Republic have been using a radioactive pool to treat patients, the field of neuroforensics comes to the courtroom, and the Vatican... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We must also acknowledge that art is owned” A VR hacking collective take over MoMA for a night, the first major exhibition of western art is set to show in Tehran, and one... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The power and importance of human touch” Holding hands might ease a partner's pain, polar regions encounter this year's spring weather before the rest of the globe, and Dolce & Gabbana comes... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Looking into a portable funhouse mirror” Japan rebuts cannibalistic fake news, satire could actually, maybe, be a political motivator, and selfies are warping self-perception. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A library of the 20th century” A pact protecting environmental activists in South America is set to be signed, 4G service comes to the moon, and the poetry collector behind the... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A curiosity hangs by the thigh of a man” A dangerous toad threatens the ecology of Madagascar, a painkilling alternative to opioids may exist in the brain, and the story behind one of the... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Discovering that life has somehow found a way to make it work” Researchers look at the impact of sea-level rise on the West Coast, there may be the possibility life on Mars, after all, and a debate... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold On Loan: The sublime chaos of Egypt’s unknown surrealist collective, Art et Liberté As the works of this lesser-known art collective come to the Tate Liverpool this month, Document spoke with the show's curator about the stringent political... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Some things have not changed” One writer explores masculine identity in the age of Trump, researchers are still confused by sonic attacks on U.S. diplomats in Cuba, and mathematicians uncover... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We thought there was one last wild species” There are no more truly 'wild' horses left on the planet, Elon Musk's Hyperloop may finally break ground on the East Coast, and Mr. Chow... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Solid light works” Iran indulges its reptilian paranoia, machines are making art that's fooling the human eye, and book reviews, argues one critic, only seem to offer vapid... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “I think everybody should like everybody” Cape Town holds off its water crisis, for now, intimate Andy Warhol recordings recently unearthed, and one of the world's largest publishing CEOs says Ebooks... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “How many times can you continue knocking on a closed door?” Iran's first and only female conductor on the country's political climate, Sotheby's helps you visual your taste in art, and is that really Trump tweeting? by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An appropriate place for a bit of end-of-the-world hedonism” Dubai relaunches a debauched luxury development, researchers uncover new secrets about Picasso's artistic practice, and scientists now understand the need for sleep better than ever. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Antarctic’s icy spell becomes a tourism fantasy The world's most inhospitable continent may be the next hospitality hot spot. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A bridge between the minuscule quantum world and our macroscopic reality” Japan's stubborn immigration policies, the story behind the science photo of the year, and volcanic ash might be material of the future. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “They could not escape time’s eraser” The Tea Party's racialized language studied, Tech CEOs are making an end-times retreat in New Zealand, and avant-garde artist Jef Geys died at 83. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A new way to participate in the growing experience” The very vocal future of hydroponics, Silvo Berlusconi's animal instincts are political, and a visual study of cultural hegemony. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The biggest impact to the landscape is human activity” Man-made climate change is measure in Kenya, Wolfgang Tillmans on his latest EP. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold On Loan: Loose change from the enlightenment This week, an exploration of the British Museum's archives yields a copper coin tells the story of England's ascent from the dark ages. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Blooming, buzzing confusion” Unseen beauty at the bottom of the Antarctic, Netflix's film still methodology, and the story of a mysterious radio station. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We need more light” Researchers make a case for 'more light,' Chinese police break out the facial surveillance glasses, and the truth about women in the U.K,'s grime scene. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An approach that is better aware of uncertainty is more reliable” Uncertainty might help with making better decisions, a Vantablack house is built for the Winter Olympics, those who contemplate the future are better at waiting. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Time is not at all something that is an immutable truth” Director Agnes Varda sends the Academy of Motion Pictures a cut-out of her face, the first Britons may have actually been black, and Facebook’s algorithms... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Like reality, but distorted” Youtube algorithms are biased, traffic noise can disrupt you on the molecular level, and healthy food tastes better when it looks better. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The cryptocurrency revolution begins to fray Is one of the most-hyped advancements in technology beginning to wreak havoc? by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Museums are gradually practicing the art of embracing women’s stories Museums in the UK are removing stereotypical representations of the female form and replacing them with stories of female empowerment by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Vatican is looking to capitalize on Andy Warhol’s closeted Catholicism A retrospective of the artist's "spiritual works" will be featured in a joint exhibition by the Vatican and The Andy Warhol Museum in 2019 by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Hobby Lobby can’t stop smuggling Mesopotamian artifacts The Justice Department has requested another 245 artifacts smuggled out of Iraq by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The Dutch Fashion Police are scanning the streets for Gucci and Rolex Police in Rotterdam will soon be on the hunt for “Big Rolexes" and "Gucci jackets" by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The epidemic ravaging the developed world? Loneliness. Social atomization, separated families and lack of physical contact between people are creating a spike of loneliness across the U.S. and U.K. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The #resistance might be great for your career says study Civic engagement is, unsurprisingly, a good thing for individuals by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Cape Town is at risk of running out of water by April South Africa's second-largest city has nearly drained its reservoirs by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Algorithms could aid in the successful integration of refugees Researchers have produced an algorithm that processes multiple factors to formalize the perfect match between a migrant and a location by Caroline Christie Above the Fold German linguistics declare ‘alternative facts’ as the most offensive word of the year It's the first time an American-born term has won the dubious honor by Caroline Christie Above the Fold New York City reviews its “symbols of hate,” removes only one The statue of Dr. J. Marion Sims will be relocated to Green-Wood Cemetery by Caroline Christie Above the Fold The latest health trend for affluent Americans is tracking sleep And no one can say why they're doing it by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Why are the attacks on the march for our lives so laughable? Conservative America is in a panic. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold A New York City bill aims to protect a worker’s right to ‘disconnect’ A bill filed by City Councilman Rafael L. Espinal would require companies with more than ten employees to refrain from off-hour communications. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Uber fatality highlights the plight of the American pedestrian The tragedy in Arizona took place at the intersection of economic inequality and urban planning's long-standing apathy for pedestrians. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Imagining the end of Facebook, for the first time As the Cambridge Analytica revelations widen, the company's demise no longer seems like a fantastical possibility. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold On Loan: An observation on life in a British prison Document spoke with an archivist with England's Mass Observation Unit about a special artifact on life in one of the country's oldest prisons. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Is Germaine Greer’s clear-eyed approach to #MeToo actually controversial? The prominent feminist author of 'The Female Eunuch' is thought to be against the #MeToo movement, yet a close reading of her words portrays an... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Why does Facebook keep trying to censor artwork with nudity in France of all places? The platform has found itself in the past weeks waging cultural battles with several French users over the use of nudity in works of art,... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The inner architectural voice of the city” Los Angeles now has a design Czar, it turns out humans began innovating much earlier in history than assume, and the Vatican comes clean about... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An enchanted world now exists alongside the disenchanted one” Half of the world's wildlife may be gone in the next century, the devil is trending, and listening to your favorite song while studying isn't... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Learning tools for young surgeons” The iPhone may be a brain surgeon's best friend, meet the Cobalt Cowboy, and were Hubert de Givenchy and Audrey Hepburn the original influencers? by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “No deference to a good looking face” Wearing makeup may come at cost for women in leadership roles, Leonardo Da Vinci's notes on urban planning may be of use today, and DJ... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Living in the loudest cities” A survey of noise pollution across the world, the Frida Kahlo Barbie Doll is problematic, and Russia now legally recognizes contemporary art. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “To dabble in the occult of orange” There is a toxic history to the pigment that makes the color orange, a shanty-town is home to the thriving Ugandan film industry, and is... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A bath in radioactive water” Doctors in the Czech Republic have been using a radioactive pool to treat patients, the field of neuroforensics comes to the courtroom, and the Vatican... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We must also acknowledge that art is owned” A VR hacking collective take over MoMA for a night, the first major exhibition of western art is set to show in Tehran, and one... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The power and importance of human touch” Holding hands might ease a partner's pain, polar regions encounter this year's spring weather before the rest of the globe, and Dolce & Gabbana comes... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Looking into a portable funhouse mirror” Japan rebuts cannibalistic fake news, satire could actually, maybe, be a political motivator, and selfies are warping self-perception. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A library of the 20th century” A pact protecting environmental activists in South America is set to be signed, 4G service comes to the moon, and the poetry collector behind the... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A curiosity hangs by the thigh of a man” A dangerous toad threatens the ecology of Madagascar, a painkilling alternative to opioids may exist in the brain, and the story behind one of the... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Discovering that life has somehow found a way to make it work” Researchers look at the impact of sea-level rise on the West Coast, there may be the possibility life on Mars, after all, and a debate... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold On Loan: The sublime chaos of Egypt’s unknown surrealist collective, Art et Liberté As the works of this lesser-known art collective come to the Tate Liverpool this month, Document spoke with the show's curator about the stringent political... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Some things have not changed” One writer explores masculine identity in the age of Trump, researchers are still confused by sonic attacks on U.S. diplomats in Cuba, and mathematicians uncover... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We thought there was one last wild species” There are no more truly 'wild' horses left on the planet, Elon Musk's Hyperloop may finally break ground on the East Coast, and Mr. Chow... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Solid light works” Iran indulges its reptilian paranoia, machines are making art that's fooling the human eye, and book reviews, argues one critic, only seem to offer vapid... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “I think everybody should like everybody” Cape Town holds off its water crisis, for now, intimate Andy Warhol recordings recently unearthed, and one of the world's largest publishing CEOs says Ebooks... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “How many times can you continue knocking on a closed door?” Iran's first and only female conductor on the country's political climate, Sotheby's helps you visual your taste in art, and is that really Trump tweeting? by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An appropriate place for a bit of end-of-the-world hedonism” Dubai relaunches a debauched luxury development, researchers uncover new secrets about Picasso's artistic practice, and scientists now understand the need for sleep better than ever. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Antarctic’s icy spell becomes a tourism fantasy The world's most inhospitable continent may be the next hospitality hot spot. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A bridge between the minuscule quantum world and our macroscopic reality” Japan's stubborn immigration policies, the story behind the science photo of the year, and volcanic ash might be material of the future. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “They could not escape time’s eraser” The Tea Party's racialized language studied, Tech CEOs are making an end-times retreat in New Zealand, and avant-garde artist Jef Geys died at 83. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “A new way to participate in the growing experience” The very vocal future of hydroponics, Silvo Berlusconi's animal instincts are political, and a visual study of cultural hegemony. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “The biggest impact to the landscape is human activity” Man-made climate change is measure in Kenya, Wolfgang Tillmans on his latest EP. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold On Loan: Loose change from the enlightenment This week, an exploration of the British Museum's archives yields a copper coin tells the story of England's ascent from the dark ages. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Blooming, buzzing confusion” Unseen beauty at the bottom of the Antarctic, Netflix's film still methodology, and the story of a mysterious radio station. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “We need more light” Researchers make a case for 'more light,' Chinese police break out the facial surveillance glasses, and the truth about women in the U.K,'s grime scene. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “An approach that is better aware of uncertainty is more reliable” Uncertainty might help with making better decisions, a Vantablack house is built for the Winter Olympics, those who contemplate the future are better at waiting. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Time is not at all something that is an immutable truth” Director Agnes Varda sends the Academy of Motion Pictures a cut-out of her face, the first Britons may have actually been black, and Facebook’s algorithms... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Document Agenda: “Like reality, but distorted” Youtube algorithms are biased, traffic noise can disrupt you on the molecular level, and healthy food tastes better when it looks better. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The cryptocurrency revolution begins to fray Is one of the most-hyped advancements in technology beginning to wreak havoc? by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Museums are gradually practicing the art of embracing women’s stories Museums in the UK are removing stereotypical representations of the female form and replacing them with stories of female empowerment by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Vatican is looking to capitalize on Andy Warhol’s closeted Catholicism A retrospective of the artist's "spiritual works" will be featured in a joint exhibition by the Vatican and The Andy Warhol Museum in 2019 by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Hobby Lobby can’t stop smuggling Mesopotamian artifacts The Justice Department has requested another 245 artifacts smuggled out of Iraq by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The Dutch Fashion Police are scanning the streets for Gucci and Rolex Police in Rotterdam will soon be on the hunt for “Big Rolexes" and "Gucci jackets" by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The epidemic ravaging the developed world? Loneliness. Social atomization, separated families and lack of physical contact between people are creating a spike of loneliness across the U.S. and U.K. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The #resistance might be great for your career says study Civic engagement is, unsurprisingly, a good thing for individuals by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Cape Town is at risk of running out of water by April South Africa's second-largest city has nearly drained its reservoirs by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Algorithms could aid in the successful integration of refugees Researchers have produced an algorithm that processes multiple factors to formalize the perfect match between a migrant and a location by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold German linguistics declare ‘alternative facts’ as the most offensive word of the year It's the first time an American-born term has won the dubious honor by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold New York City reviews its “symbols of hate,” removes only one The statue of Dr. J. Marion Sims will be relocated to Green-Wood Cemetery by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold The latest health trend for affluent Americans is tracking sleep And no one can say why they're doing it by Caroline Christie