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The New Republic
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Culture
May 14, 2021
Jo Livingstone
Branding ACT UP
On the aesthetic legacy of HIV/AIDS activism in our own time of viral panic.
May 13, 2021
Magazine
Win McCormack
The Undefeated
Ernest Hemingway’s one enduring character? Ernest Hemingway.
May 13, 2021
Lynn Steger Strong
How Adrienne Rich Changed Her Mind
A new biography captures a poet’s commitments, reversals, and reinventions.
May 11, 2021
Magazine
Kate Wagner
Why the Democrats Need an Architectural Vision to Counter the Right’s
Republicans are already advancing a distinct—if ugly and tasteless—aesthetic. Biden should follow in FDR’s footsteps and create a Public Works Administration for the twenty-first century.
May 11, 2021
Chris Lehmann
The Pandemic Planners Were Ready. No One Listened.
The heroes of Michael Lewis’s new book, “The Premonition,” are a band of intrepid policy entrepreneurs.
May 10, 2021
Magazine
Charlie Savage
The Rise of Private Spies
What happens when online investigators and detectives-for-hire take on intelligence work?
May 7, 2021
Jensen Davis
Andy Cohen’s Reality Television Fantasy
What the host of “For Real: The Story of Reality TV” is really selling
May 5, 2021
Magazine
Ronald Radosh
,
Sol Stern
Our Friend, the Trump Propagandist
We knew David Horowitz when he was a radical leftist. Then he became a conservative. Then he joined the MAGA cult.
May 4, 2021
Jacob Silverman
Josh Hawley and the GOP’s Fake War Against Big Tech
The senator’s new book is a case study in why conservatives struggle to be populists.
May 3, 2021
Alex Shephard
Why the Chaotic Protest at Manchester United’s Stadium Was Good, Actually
It turns out that soccer’s pundit class doesn’t really want to hear from the fans, even after the Super League debacle.
April 30, 2021
Alex Shephard
What Does Book Publishing Stand For?
A series of controversies has called the industry’s supposed values into question.
April 30, 2021
Magazine
Brian Russell
I am making a desert
April 30, 2021
Nick Martin
Why Is Ed Helms Leading the First Native Sitcom?
“Rutherford Falls” could have been a great show—except for one small problem.
April 30, 2021
Jo Livingstone
How a Young Scholar Changed Our Understanding of Homer Forever
On the short and momentous life of Milman Parry
April 29, 2021
Magazine
Ganesh Sitaraman
The Coming Revolution in the American Economy
In the Biden era, the Reaganite consensus is finally breaking down.
April 28, 2021
Jennifer Wilson
Helen Oyeyemi’s Impossible Places
Her new novel, “Peaces,” asks how much room we are willing to make for other people.
April 23, 2021
Alex Shephard
Why the Super League “Dirty Dozen” Are Obsessed With Fortnite
A changing culture lies at the heart of soccer’s existential crisis.
April 23, 2021
Magazine
Jake Bittle
Ben Shapiro Goes Trolling in Hollywood
The conservative gadfly’s new film studio is a bid to monetize the battle against cancel culture.
April 23, 2021
Jo Livingstone
The Blake Bailey Fiasco Implicates Everyone
What effect will accusations of sexual assault have on the acclaimed biographer’s champions?
April 23, 2021
Zachary Siegel
What Did the Sacklers Know?
Patrick Radden Keefe’s new book provides the fullest accounting so far of Purdue Pharma’s role in the opioid crisis.
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