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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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Culture
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.
June 27, 2019
Magazine
Roy Scranton
How John Hersey Bore Witness
The author of
Hiroshima
showed the world the realities of American power.
June 27, 2019
Lyz Lenz
The Loudest Voice
Stars A
Very Simple Monster
The new miniseries casts Roger Ailes and Fox News as all-powerful architects of political disaster. The truth is more complicated.
June 27, 2019
Jo Livingstone
The Death of Taboo
How Donald Trump and his allies have drained the stigma from society's worst transgressions.
June 26, 2019
Magazine
Sarah Jones
Miriam Toews’s Quiet Revolution
The women in her new novel confront abuse and grapple with faith.
June 25, 2019
Gaiutra Bahadur
The United States’ Debt to Immigrants
Suketu Mehta’s new book reckons with the colonialism and exploitation that have uprooted so many people.
June 20, 2019
Aaron Timms
The Sameness of Cass Sunstein
His books keep pushing the same technocratic fixes. But today’s most pressing questions cannot be depoliticized.
June 19, 2019
Daisy Alioto
How Graffiti Became Gentrified
Two decades after Rudy Giuliani tried to rid New York City of graffiti, the art form is flourishing—with unexpected consequences.
June 19, 2019
Adrian Daub
Hulu’s
Das Boot
Gets Lost at Sea
The new remake of a World War II epic falls victim to the conventions of prestige TV.
June 14, 2019
Maris Kreizman
A Journey With Naomi Wolf
The author’s latest book “Outrages” has been postponed. But she was once essential reading.
June 13, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Exposé Entertainment Is the Surprise Hit of the Summer
In an environment thick with conspiracy, we thrill to stories of truth versus evil. But at what cost?
June 11, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Who Owns the Crusades?
A new book about the medieval holy wars exposes a crisis in the field of history.
June 11, 2019
Magazine
Daniel Immerwahr
All Over the Map
Jared Diamond struggles to understand a connected world.
June 10, 2019
Michael Kazin
The Impossibility of Impeachment
Andrew Johnson’s opponents discovered the difficulties of removing a president.
June 7, 2019
Emily Atkin
The Promise and Problem of Fake Meat
It could help improve public health and reduce climate change. But questions remain about the highly processed food—and some producers' coziness with the "real meat" industry.
June 6, 2019
Magazine
Justin Phillip Reed
This Is Really Happening
June 6, 2019
Magazine
Ryu Spaeth
Aleksandar Hemon’s Lost Eden
A novelist reckons with the disappearance of his country.
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