
Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
@LeMonde_EN journalist and editor. 🇫🇷🗞 Words in @nytimes @atlasobscura @BitchMedia @JSTOR_Daily @TeenVogue @them @VICE @yesmagazine
Articles
The Internet Can Tell You What We Know. But There’s Also a Website That Collects What We Don’t Know.
2 weeks ago |
slate.com | Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
Skip to the content Pressed All the Buttons to See What Would Happen Online Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. What is the etymology of curmudgeon? What caused Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s death at age 35? Why do many fungi species generate electrical activity?
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2 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. What is the etymology of curmudgeon? What caused Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s death at age 35? Why do many fungi species generate electrical activity? The website Wikenigma, an “encyclopedia of unknowns,” won’t provide answers to these conundrums, and that’s the whole point.
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1 month ago |
heyalma.com | Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
In 2005, J.T. Waldman released his graphic novel “Megillat Esther,” a bold black-and-white telling of the Purim story featuring Hebrew calligraphy and English. The project allowed the recently graduated Waldman to explore his Jewish identity, which he has continued to do in collective projects including “Krakow to Krypton” and “Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me.”Now in 2025, “Megillat Esther” is getting a 20-anniversary rerelease through Print-O-Craft, a Jewish Philadelphia-based publisher.
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2 months ago |
slate.com | Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
Food Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. During the height of the Paris Olympics, I sneaked off to brunch with an old college friend at a bucolic spot hidden off the main tourist avenues of the hilly Montmartre.
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2 months ago |
yahoo.com | Hannah Steinkopf-Frank
Generate Key TakeawaysSign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. During the height of the Paris Olympics, I sneaked off to brunch with an old college friend at a bucolic spot hidden off the main tourist avenues of the hilly Montmartre.
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For @JSTOR_Daily I wrote about how a radical theory of how to more intentionally move through the physical world might just make our lives (and that of others) a bit better. https://t.co/ZTcrwoUXXH

My downstairs neighbor has now three times knocked on my door to borrow a wine opener in the last few weeks. I don’t know if this is someone incredibly unadapted to life in France or the start of a rom-com.

I may have had Barbies (against my mom’s wishes) but my doll allegiances clearly lay elsewhere. https://t.co/piHtZnASAA