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The New Republic
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Culture
July 20, 2017
Jeet Heer
Donald Trump gives us
Drunk History
—while sober.
July 20, 2017
Jo Livingstone
The New “Hot Shakespeare” Show Is ... Good?
TNT’s new drama "Will" is an odd but invigorating fantasy of the Bard's salad days.
July 20, 2017
Magazine
Alex Shephard
Ultimate Salesman
How Trump is helping to revive the publishing industry.
July 19, 2017
Clio Chang
The
Sex and the City
of the Trump Era?
“The Bold Type” is a reboot of a now-familiar television genre, with an updated politics that doesn’t quite meet its moment.
July 19, 2017
Lovia Gyarkye
The Importance of Being Ordinary
Gwendolyn Brooks’s life and work asserted the humanity of black people in America.
July 18, 2017
Maggie Doherty
Fairytales Punish the Curious
How Angela Carter escaped a puritanical childhood and stifling marriage, and reimagined sexuality.
July 17, 2017
The New Republic
Game of Thrones
’s
New Hard-Edged Morality
We discuss "Dragonstone," the first episode in the seventh season of HBO’s fantasy series.
July 17, 2017
Evan Kindley
The Mysteries of John Ashbery
A new biography tells how the poet formed a taste for ambiguity and indirection.
July 17, 2017
Magazine
Win McCormack
Created Equal
How the divide between rich and poor has undermined the Constitution.
July 15, 2017
Jeet Heer
We Are Living in the Coen Brothers’ Darkest Comedy
2008's "Burn After Reading" strikingly resembles the bumbling plot of Trump's Russia scandal, but also captures how amorality leads to treason.
July 14, 2017
Zan Romanoff
How Eve Babitz and Francesca Lia Block Made Los Angeles Literary
The novels "Sex and Rage" and "Weetzie Bat" shine a light on the City of Angels.
July 13, 2017
William Davies
What Is “Neo” About Neoliberalism?
How to tell the difference between liberalism and something else.
July 13, 2017
Jo Livingstone
The Gorgeous Stupidity of
Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets
Luc Besson’s latest is a pyrotechnic extravaganza that is light on the human element.
July 12, 2017
Jeet Heer
Like Batman, Mark Zuckerberg is a master of the surprise drop-in.
July 12, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Why Cinema Loves the Marginalized Scientist
"Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge" joins the ever-growing genre of movies celebrating scientists who have triumphed against prejudice.
July 12, 2017
Bill McKibben
What Would Thoreau Think of Climate Change?
On the author's 200th birthday, what "Walden" can teach us about our own time.
July 10, 2017
Bradley Babendir
How a Syrian Writer Takes on War
Osama Alomar's story collection "The Teeth of the Comb" looks at cruelty, compassion, and hope in the face of catastrophe.
July 10, 2017
Magazine
Rachel Syme
How the New
Twin Peaks
Made Television Strange Again
David Lynch wanted to create a small-town Marilyn Monroe. He came up with Laura Palmer.
July 8, 2017
Jeet Heer
America’s First Postmodern President
Trump's ascendance is no accident. He's the culmination of our epoch of unreality. What does that herald for the resistance?
July 7, 2017
Jo Livingstone
A True Romance, Then and Now
Sylvia Brownrigg’s new novel follows up on an affair between two women, 20 years after their first encounter.
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