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The New Republic
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Culture
April 8, 2021
Philippa Snow
Made for Love
Puts a Marriage Under the Microscope
The new HBO series based on Alissa Nutting’s novel is a futuristic, surreal take on an unhealthy relationship.
April 7, 2021
Jeremy Lybarger
The Turbulent Life of Francis Bacon
Bacon’s contradictions make him the rare artist who warrants an infatuated 900-page biography.
April 6, 2021
Magazine
Samanth Subramanian
The Mysteries of Stephen Hawking’s Universe
Why did “A Brief History of Time” make its author the most famous scientist in the world?
April 6, 2021
Jo Livingstone
Last Judgment
On the role of criticism in the end times
April 2, 2021
Magazine
Sarah Leonard
How Amazon Exploited a Weakened America
The immense power of Jeff Bezos’s empire reveals a country that has been falling apart for quite some time.
April 1, 2021
Magazine
John Banville
The Haunted Imagination of Alfred Hitchcock
How the master of suspense got his sadistic streak
March 31, 2021
Scott W. Stern
A Rust Belt City’s New Working Class
Heavy industry once drove Pittsburgh’s economy. Now health care does—but without the same hard-won benefits.
March 30, 2021
Jo Livingstone
Sharon Stone and the Fantasy of Female Domination
At the peak of her fame, she exuded total control on screen. According to her new memoir, a different story played out behind the scenes.
March 26, 2021
Jake Bittle
The Nail-Biting Story of Obamacare
Jonathan Cohn’s new book shows how narrowly health care reform passed—and how far we are from universal coverage.
March 25, 2021
Magazine
Emily Bernard
Audre Lorde Broke the Silence
In her poems and “The Cancer Journals,” Lorde fought to name her experience.
March 24, 2021
Magazine
Daniel Immerwahr
Paleo Con
How thought leaders resurrected the myth of a carefree prehistoric lifestyle
March 24, 2021
Philippa Snow
Love and Humiliation Are Inseparable in
Acts of Desperation
Megan Nolan’s novel is a compulsive story of desire, subservience, and self-annihiliation.
March 23, 2021
Jo Livingstone
Demi Lovato’s Sexual Assault Revelations: A Black Eye for Disney?
Her new documentary, “Dancing With the Devil,” is a masterclass in owning the narrative.
March 23, 2021
Jacob Silverman
Is This Q?
A new HBO documentary investigates the first family of QAnon
March 22, 2021
Laura Marsh
Philip Roth’s Revenge Fantasy
The novelist wanted his biography to settle scores. It has badly backfired.
March 19, 2021
The New Republic Staff
Is
Zack Snyder’s Justice League
the Worst Superhero Movie Yet?
A TNR roundtable discussion
March 19, 2021
Magazine
Siddhartha Deb
The Shadow Over H.P. Lovecraft
Recent works inspired by his fiction struggle to reckon with his racist fantasies.
March 17, 2021
Divya Subramanian
The Lost Plan for a Black Utopian Town
Soul City in North Carolina was designed to build Black wealth and address racial injustice. Then its opponents lined up.
March 15, 2021
Zachary Siegel
How America Segregates Drug Use
The line between legal pharmaceuticals and illegal drugs has less to do with science than with race, class, and gender.
March 12, 2021
Jo Livingstone
The Struggle to Define Life
Two new books shed light on the different ways we view the business of existing.
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