The novel was a dominant art form last century
What does the 21st century hold for it?
THE NOVEL is dead; the novel is dying; prestige television has killed it. These familiar complaints are oddly comforting, both because hand-wringing over the state of the novel is a time-honoured pursuit, and readers who pick up the remote instead of a book after dinner—as your correspondent does more often than he should—can feel they are engaging with culture’s dominant narrative form rather than just relaxing on the couch.
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This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Full of sound and fury”
Culture
December 14th 2024
From the December 14th 2024 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the editionMeghan Markle’s new Netflix show is out of touch with the times
In it she positions herself as an elite Martha Stewart

This year’s Oscars were notably apolitical
Hollywood has ditched resistance in favour of toeing the line
AI unleashes a weird new genre of political communication
Donald Trump’s Gaza video offers a taste of what is to come
Why are live albums back in fashion?
Hitmakers including Niall Horan, Dua Lipa and Ed Sheeran have released them
Caviar is the internet’s favourite indulgence
Russian tsars loved it. Now TikTok does, too
Finding meaning in people’s first words—and their last
Why there is less significance than society would have you believe