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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
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The New Republic
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The New Republic
Culture
August 6, 2019
Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw
The Destructive Politics of White Amnesia
Joe Biden set the stage for Donald Trump's racial scapegoating. Why can't he admit that he was wrong?
August 5, 2019
Abhrajyoti Chakraborty
Natalia Ginzburg’s Radical Clarity
Wars, deaths, suffering women, and families and their discontents are the abiding themes of her novels.
July 30, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Colson Whitehead, American Escape Artist
"The Nickel Boys" frees voices imprisoned in a forgotten past.
July 30, 2019
Hannah Rosefield
The Voice of a Microgeneration
How Jia Tolentino’s incisive, capacious essays became essential reading.
July 29, 2019
Win McCormack
The Manson Girl Who Got Away
What drew "Juanita" to the cult? And why did she leave it, just before the Tate murders?
July 26, 2019
Daniel Luban
The Man Behind National Conservatism
Yoram Hazony has written the closest thing to a manifesto for intellectuals on the right.
July 22, 2019
Jo Livingstone
What Women Want
Lisa Taddeo’s "Three Women" is an unsparing portrait of desire.
July 22, 2019
Jennifer Wilson
Svetlana Alexievich’s Child’s-Eye View
The child witnesses in her new book focus on the bewildering experience of war.
July 18, 2019
Avi Asher-Schapiro
The Very Small World of VC
The people who bet big on disruptive technologies have a lot in common.
July 16, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Lila Savage’s
Say Say Say
Is a Breakthrough in Women’s Fiction
A debut novel explores self-care through the mind of a caregiver.
July 15, 2019
Matt Farwell
Playing Soldiers
An Afghanistan veteran reckons with growing up on G.I. Joe and growing tired of American war drums.
July 11, 2019
Colin Dickey
The Secrets in Greenland’s Ice
From exploration to Cold War militarization, how the Arctic became the focus of the climate crisis.
July 10, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Pining for the Moon
On Apollo 11's fiftieth anniversary, a new exhibition at the Met explores the moon's place in our cultural imagination.
July 9, 2019
Magazine
Alex Lemon
XXXVI
July 9, 2019
Magazine
Shelley Wong
For the Living in the New World
July 5, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Midsommar
Is a Nightmare in Broad Daylight
Ari Aster's folk-horror flick is frightening, beautiful, and just a little unhinged.
July 3, 2019
Magazine
J.C. Pan
Democratic Rot and the Origins of American Conspiracism
Crank ideas have always flourished in times of great instability and inequality.
July 2, 2019
Bryce Covert
The Myth of the Welfare Queen
The right turned Linda Taylor into a bogeyman. But her real life was much more complicated.
July 1, 2019
Amanda Little
The Meat Mogul’s Case For Lab-Grown Beef
“If we can make the meat without the animal, why wouldn’t we do that?”
June 28, 2019
Rachel Syme
Big Little Lies
Gets Tough
The HBO show’s second season feels bleaker and is harder on its characters.
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