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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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LATEST
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POLITICS
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The New Republic
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The New Republic
Author
Jennifer Wilson
@JenLouiseWilson
Jennifer Wilson is a frequent contributor to
The New Republic
.
All Articles
August 19, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
The Everyday Inspiration for
Anna Karenina
Did distractions, disruptions, and gossip shape Tolstoy’s novel as much as long-simmering ideas about morality and desire?
June 23, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
The Many Sounds of Black Lives Matter
The movement has resisted an anthem. Instead, it has redefined protest music.
June 10, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
The Down Days
Is an Eerily Prescient Pandemic Novel
When Ilze Hugo started writing about an outbreak, she thought she was imagining a far-fetched dystopia.
May 15, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
The Great
’s Empowerment Problem
Hulu’s new show wants to portray an ultracompetent female ruler. But it fails to capture the real genius of Catherine the Great.
April 3, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
No One Disagrees With Rebecca Solnit
Recollections of My Nonexistence
is big on relatable feminist insights but skips the difficult questions.
March 2, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
Lena Waithe Insists on Irreverence
Her semi-autobiographical comedy,
Twenties,
is both about making it in Hollywood and about what makes good black art.
January 16, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
An Experiment in Reading Elena Ferrante
How do you let others influence you while retaining your own ideas? Four literary critics tried to find out.
December 10, 2019
Jennifer Wilson
Vladimir Nabokov’s Fighting Spirit
A new essay collection shows his opposition to Cold War politics in literature.
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.
May 20, 2019
Jennifer Wilson
Care in a Land of Closing Hospitals
The Russian writer Maxim Osipov was best known as a medical doctor, until he began to publish arresting, empathetic stories of sickness and treatment.
May 9, 2019
Jennifer Wilson
How To Think Freely
In their encounters with Western art, Soviet audiences found ways to reimagine themselves.
December 10, 2018
Jennifer Wilson
The Trouble With Netflix’s New Cold War Thriller
“1983” imagines a terrifying alternate reality, but ignores the real dangers that Poland faces today.
October 15, 2018
Jennifer Wilson
The Romanoffs
’ Missed Opportunity
Matthew Weiner’s new show had the potential to reckon with the uses and abuses of the past.
July 23, 2018
Jennifer Wilson
Making It in Capitalist Moscow
A Russian-American graduate student struggles for authenticity in Keith Gessen’s novel “A Terrible Country.”
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