Regarding Christopher
Read Pollitt's complicated and touching tribute to the late Christopher Hitchens, online at her Nation blog.
Read Pollitt's complicated and touching tribute to the late Christopher Hitchens, online at her Nation blog.
Mulled wine, fruitcake, carols and latkes are all very well. (Wait, latkes? I'll take some of those!) But the best holiday tradition is helping others through our annual end-of-year donations list. Whip out your checkbook and read on.
Read Pollitt's new blog about Plan B online, at The Nation.
Check out two new Nation columns:
Rick Perry, God and Me: When I Got the Call, and Penn State's Patriarchal Pastimes.
Katha's new column is up now at The Nation. Read it online.
Sarah Erdreich recently interviewed Katha Pollitt for the website Feminists for Choice. Read Katha's thoughts on feminism today online.
Read Pollitt's new column about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis online, at The Nation's website.
Check out Katha's newest Nation column, about the history of birth control and its current "controversy."
An excerpt from the article, which can be read online:
"It’s hard to imagine anyone opposing broader access to contraception. But it’s lucky that the HHS can accept these recommendations without Congressional approval, because this is America, where anything involving sex and/or women drives some people crazy. How crazy? Two weeks before the recommendations came out, Leonard Blair, the Catholic bishop of Toledo, Ohio, urged Catholic schools and parishes to cease raising money for Susan Komen for The Cure, the country’s largest breast cancer charity, because someday it might fund embryonic stem-cell research. Better actual women should die of breast cancer today than that an embryo be theoretically imperiled in the vague and misty future."
Check out Pollitt's most recent blog post on The Nation.
Check out Katha's newest Nation column about SlutWalk, young feminists' take-it-to-the-streets protest of victim-blaming for sexual violence.
Katha had a conversation with Saudi women's rights and human rights campaigner Wajeha al-Huwaider. Read it online at The Nation.