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The New Republic
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LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
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CULTURE
MAGAZINE
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PODCASTS
GAMES
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
Books
May 1, 2018
Anna Wiener
The Internet Women Made
Claire L. Evans’s new book is a bittersweet reminder that the internet used to be freer and more fun.
April 27, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Did Math Kill God?
A new book on Renaissance mathematics makes a bold case.
April 26, 2018
Colette Shade
What Wendell Berry Wants
Can an environmentalist avoid political movements and the big, structural solutions they offer?
April 25, 2018
Maggie Doherty
On Not Becoming a Mother
In her new novel “Motherhood,” Sheila Heti reflects on fate, agency, and time.
April 23, 2018
Magazine
Patrick Iber
Worlds Apart
How neoliberalism shapes the global economy and limits the power of democracies.
April 20, 2018
Joanna Scutts
The Fight Women Won
Militant suffragettes’ most important tactic was to turn women’s bodies—supposedly passive, pliant, and protected—into a battleground.
April 16, 2018
Heather Souvaine Horn
A System in Denial
Industrialization, a new book argues, depended on gun-making. But from the start manufacturers refused any responsibility for gun violence.
April 13, 2018
Alex Shephard
The president is in a rage over James Comey’s book.
April 13, 2018
Sarah Jones
Can White Supremacists Unlearn Hate?
An interview with Michael Kimmel, whose new book, "Healing From Hate," focuses on men who have left their extremist pasts behind
April 12, 2018
Jacob Soll
How Islam Shaped the Enlightenment
A new book recovers the work of scholars who helped establish greater understanding between religions.
April 11, 2018
Michelle Dean
Pauline Kael’s Long Delayed Big Break
Through years of setbacks and discouragement, Kael insisted that movies should be free from stereotypes, unpretentious, and fun.
April 9, 2018
Alex Shephard
Will Hollywood Ever Make Another
Children of Men
?
An interview with Ben Fritz, whose “The Big Picture” explores the way the franchise model and streaming services have disrupted the film industry.
April 9, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Does Crafting Make People Happier?
Three new books reveal the tangled ethics of the artisanal life.
April 9, 2018
Michael Friedrich
Men and Apparitions
Dissects A Male Feminist’s Crisis
In Lynne Tillman’s new novel, an ethnographer studies the New Man, raised in the 90s among feminists, and examines himself.
April 5, 2018
Magazine
Linda Gordon
Body and Soul
How birth-control leaders found allies in American religious groups
April 5, 2018
Linda Kinstler
How 1947 Changed the World
Elisabeth Asbrink’s new book looks for lessons both in counterfactuals and in post-war history.
April 4, 2018
Magazine
Siddhartha Deb
A Model Businessman
What Dave Eggers misses in his story of a Yemeni-American man’s rise
April 2, 2018
David Sessions
The Meaning of American Factories
After decades of plant closures and anti-union politics, why does heavy industry symbolize prosperity?
March 30, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Alan Hollinghurst’s Long Journey
His new novel, "The Sparsholt Affair," affirms the novelist as a master chronicler of England past and present.
March 29, 2018
Magazine
Kim Phillips-Fein
Company Men
The 200-year legal struggle that led to Citizens United and gave corporations the rights of people
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