Roundtable

Opinions and analysis from Lapham’s Quarterly writers and editors.

July 20, 2025

January 15, 2014

Bedside Manner

By Caleb Gardner

Comedy thrives on contradiction, and the absurdity of life is particularly refined in the hospital. Doctors discuss breakfast as they open someone’s sternum, and a delirious patient demands green Jell-O. Laughter, it seems, is one of the few genuine reactions one can have to such a paradoxical world. But it can be deceiving.

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January 15, 2014

The Joke’s on Us

By Elias Altman

“Laughter is easily restrained by a very little reflection,” wrote the perpetually pedantic Philip Dormer Stanhope to his son in 1758, “but as it is generally connected with the idea of gaiety, people do not enough attend to its absurdity.”

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December 31, 2013

Faces of Death

By Hilary Ilkay

Artists throughout history have striven to personify death: to translate the intangible, unknown end of human beings into an image that can be perceived by the eye and grasped by the mind.

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December 22, 2013

Live Fast, Die Young, Leave a Hit

By Anne Helen Petersen

Everyone thinks they know the tragic story of James Dean: he died young and violently, he embodied the ennui and angst of the postwar generation, and his image lives on as a hollow signifier of youthful rebellion. But most don’t understand how the timing of his death, and the very specific timing of his films, turned a tragic death into a cultural crater—one that would be widened and exploited by the Hollywood publishing industry.

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December 19, 2013

Human Trophies

By Colin Dickey

The collection of Japanese war trophies—which included various body parts, including skulls—was, by all accounts, endemic and uncontrollable. When Charles Lindbergh returned to the States after a tour in the Pacific theater, he was asked by customs officers if he was carrying any “human bones” in his luggage.

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December 17, 2013

Death from Above, 1793

By John Michael Kilbane

1793 was a tender year for the new United States: the Revolutionary War had come to a close, the Bill of Rights had recently been ratified, and plague of yellow fever had struck the nation’s largest city and newest capital, Philadelphia.

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December 10, 2013

The Art of Dying

By Gayatri Devi

Seeing the buzzing around Jane lying prostate in bed, I felt myself on the set of the Ars Moriendi, the small medieval manual featuring eleven woodcuts on how to die the Good Death. The scenes are more crowded than the main floor of Barney's at Christmas season, teeming with saints, devils and people.

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December 05, 2013

My First Mistake

By Simon Winchester

The victim of the first big mistake I ever made was a gentleman to whom I had never been properly introduced (and whose name I still do not know) but who was possessed of three singular qualities: he was alone in a room with me, he was without his trousers, and he was very, very dead.

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August 07, 2023

Monumental Mistakes

2023:

Fitness instructor carves his girlfriend’s name into the Colosseum.

c. 1850:

Thompson of Sunderland makes his mark on Pompey’s pillar.

2023:

Writers on strike search for romance at the picket line.

c. 1945:

Young communists engage in party matchmaking.