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The New Republic
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Culture
June 8, 2017
Sam Metz
Édouard Louis’s Novel of the French Working Class
"The End of Eddy" shows the pride and pain of people who feel left behind—for some very familiar reasons.
June 7, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Hidden Beneath a Hockey Rink, a Silent Film Treasure Trove
A new documentary pieces together long-lost footage from the past, giving new life to stories that had been forgotten.
June 6, 2017
Jeet Heer
Why did Bob Dylan fake a Melville quote in his Nobel lecture?
June 6, 2017
Sarah Jones
The Leftovers
’ Hungry Ghosts
The series finale had disappointed hopes, thwarted quests, and something like resolution.
June 6, 2017
Adam Gaffney
How Medical Bills Harm Us All
Elisabeth Rosenthal's new book 'An American Sickness' traces the effects of profit in American health care.
June 6, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Wonder Woman
Is Propaganda
Why debating the “feminist” stakes of a movie about American military ideology is a laughable prospect.
June 2, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Why
Stalker
Is the Film We Need Now
A new restoration of Andrei Tarkovksy’s 1979 classic functions as a contemporary parable of environmental politics.
June 2, 2017
Navneet Alang
The Trump Administration Has Plans for Your Internet
Trump's new FCC chair, Ajit Pai, is on a mission to end net neutrality.
June 2, 2017
Sarah Marshall
Learning Survival Skills from Hulu’s
Harlots
A captivating drama about sex workers in 18th-century London explores how women find freedom.
June 1, 2017
Warren Breckman
The Fortunes of Freud
The prestige that psychoanalysis gained in the midcentury was also its downfall.
May 31, 2017
Graham Vyse
Al Franken picked the wrong week to return to political comedy.
May 31, 2017
Alex Shephard
Al Franken’s Memoir Is the Best Political Book of 2017
The senator from Minnesota is the rare politician with a funny bone.
May 31, 2017
Lovia Gyarkye
The Women Who Wanted A Revolution
A new Brooklyn Museum exhibition about black female artists offers a blueprint for the future of feminism.
May 31, 2017
Magazine
Sam Tanenhaus
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Shimmering Visions
The story of Fitzgerald as a victim of his own success has been greatly exaggerated.
May 31, 2017
Jo Livingstone
There’s a New Literary Celebrity in Town, and His Name Is Baruch Spinoza
Rachel Kadish’s "The Weight of Ink" is like A.S. Byatt's "Possession," but with more seventeenth-century Judaism.
May 30, 2017
James Pogue
Denis Johnson Saw What America Was Becoming
The writer focused his talent on illuminating those the country left behind.
May 30, 2017
Alex Shephard
The Amazon Bookstore Isn’t Evil. It’s Just Dumb.
Publishers fear that Amazon is trying to dominate brick-and-mortar retail. They needn't worry.
May 29, 2017
Magazine
Rachel Riederer
Libertarians Seek a Home on the High Seas
The unlikely rise—and anti-democratic impulses—of seasteading.
May 26, 2017
Alex Shephard
Denis Johnson was the best American writer of the past 25 years.
May 26, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Why Are Americans So Hostile to State-Funded Art?
A personal, historical, and comparative consideration of using public money to support the humanities.
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