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The New Republic
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The New Republic
100 Years 100 Stories
December 2, 1991
John Updike
John Updike Beautifully Explains How Difficult It Was To Read John Cheever's Tortured Journals
May 13, 1991
Michael Kelly
The Sad, Horrific Fate of Kurdish Refugees in Iran During the Gulf War
April 1, 1991
Subscribers Only
Michael Kelly
Highway to Hell
The human face of high-tech war
Subscribers Only
February 18, 1991
Subscribers Only
Irving Howe
The Value of the Canon
What's wrong with “P.C.”
Subscribers Only
October 2, 1989
Jefferson Morley
This Journalist Smoked Crack So He Could Write This Article
August 28, 1989
Hendrik Hertzberg
What Woodstock Was Really Like
June 12, 1989
Hendrik Hertzberg
We Thought the Tiananmen Square Protests Meant the End of Communism. We Were Wrong
March 27, 1989
Henry Fairlie
A Modest Proposal (To Mandate That All Politician Be Eunuchs)
A satire for the ages
February 17, 1986
Primo Levi
Primo Levi's Heartbreaking, Heroic Answers to the Most Common Questions He Was Asked About "Survival in Auschwitz"
June 13, 1983
The New Republic Staff
This Ad for a New Republic T-Shirt Had One Reader Up in Arms
February 1, 1975
Peter Barnes
The Multi-Billion Dollar Fight Over Who Owns The Sun
Documenting Santa Clara's 1975 plan to keep the sun a public resource
November 30, 1974
Stanley Kauffmann
I Saw More Than 8,000 Movies, and I Never Tired of Them
August 24, 1974
John Osborne
Inside the Last 17 Days of the Nixon White House
June 16, 1973
Morris K. Udall
How Congress Planned To Solve The 1970s Energy Crisis
Representative Mo Udall's ambitious strategy to wean the United States off fossil fuels by the year 2000
September 16, 1972
The New Republic Staff
The Forgotten Alternate Ending to 'Lady Chatterley's Lover'
October 3, 1970
Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury's Venomous, Brilliant Letter to a Writer Who Wanted To Stop Old People From Voting
September 24, 1966
Subscribers Only
Pauline Kael
Movie Brutalists
On the French New Wave
Subscribers Only
October 16, 1965
Robert Graves
Robert Graves Is Famous For His War Writing, But He Also Wrote Love Poetry
April 3, 1965
Andrew Kopkind
Marching from Selma to Montgomery in 1965
“This is not a spectacle; it’s a pilgrimage.”
February 27, 1965
Magazine
Edgar Snow
Interview with Mao
In a rare interview, Mao Tse-Tung conversed on topics ranging over what he himself called shan nan hai pei, or “from south of the mountains to north of the seas.”
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