I have rarely looked forward with less appetite to any art show than I did to “Theater of Operations: The Gulf Wars, 1991-2011,” which fills the Museum of Modern Art’s PS1 annex, in Long Island City, ...
The Art of War is written on the topic of military warfare, but its lessons have since been applied to business and entrepreneurship. The ancient Chinese text, created over 2500 years ago and ...
Not long ago, in a coffee table book about Surrealist and photojournalist Lee Miller, I spotted a curious photo of Miller sprawled naked on a lawn, her skin covered in greenish dirt and chunks of turf ...
Sun Tzu’s fifth-century military treatise, “The Art of War,” is powerful enough in its original form. Add humor, middle-aged couples, and fish, and you’ve got a clear winner. The world premiere stage ...
Sun Tzu, who flourished in the 5th century BCE, was a Chinese military strategist and the reputed author of the Chinese ...
Simplified In Short on MSN

10 powerful lessons from The Art of War

Sun Tzu’s The Art of War isn’t just for generals it’s packed with strategy, discipline, and decision-making lessons anyone can use. In this video, we simplify 10 of the most powerful takeaways so they ...
When war broke out again in Europe on September 1, 1939, the Depression-era U.S. Army was only some 170,000 soldiers ...
For better or worse, science fiction and military futurism are deeply interlinked. Science fiction films and novels have proliferated throughout military recommended reading lists, influenced naming ...
Jacob Buchalter (he/him) is a full-time Staff Writer based in the US and is an all-around creative media-obsessed individual who truly cares a bit too much about pop culture media, art, and all things ...
The most electric war plan in semi-recent American literature appears in “A Run Through the Jungle,” a story by the much-missed Thom Jones. Here is that plan in its entirety: “Infiltrate Hanoi, grab ...
Planners today struggle to properly apply operational art in large scale war — and they don’t fully realize why. It takes something like firsthand ...