Culture

American Chronicles

The TV That Created Donald Trump

Rewatching “The Apprentice,” the show that made his Presidency possible.

The Latest

Did a Cancelled Memorial to Norway’s Utøya Massacre Go Too Far?

The controversial plans for “Memory Wound,” by the Swedish artist Jonas Dahlberg, differed in instructive ways from other memorials that confront feelings of irremediable loss.

July 25, 2017

The Interpretive Extremes of Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations

In 1819, a Viennese music publisher wrote a waltz and asked dozens of composers to write a single variation. Beethoven wrote thirty-three.

July 24, 2017

“Game of Thrones” Season 7, Episode 2 Recap: Flaming Ships and Demented Laughter

This season’s episodes are moving along briskly, as are the mails.

July 24, 2017

The Uncertain Musical Legacy of Merle Haggard

Haggard’s torch is carried by roots rockers and old-school acts, but his place in mainstream country is less secure.

July 24, 2017

Javier Mariscal’s “Private Beach”

“The beach is always only three hundred feet from my studio,” the artist behind the cover of this week’s issue says.

July 24, 2017
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See our new Goings On About Town, The New Yorker’s online guide to the city’s best in culture, from ballet to bagels. »

Goings On About Town

Bordeaux Sells in de Blasio’s Brooklyn

With traditional French fare and a phenomenal wine list, L’Antagoniste lures Manhattanites to Bed-Stuy.

Ettore Sottsass’s Impertinent Genius

The Met Breuer opens a six-decade retrospective of the game-changing Austrian-Italian designer.

Chino Amobi’s Rerouted Ambient Music

On “Paradiso,” the Nigerian-American electronic producer conjures a decrepit metropolis that runs on chaos.

The Critics

Christopher Nolan’s Wartime Epic

“Dunkirk” is a harrowing look at a barely averted British catastrophe.

A New Kind of Adultery Novel

Sally Rooney’s début, “Conversations with Friends,” is a bracing study of ideas. But it’s even smarter about people.

Discovering the Brilliance of Hélio Oiticica

The Brazilian artist was sorely under-known in the U.S. while he was alive. A posthumous retrospective reveals the immersive pleasures of his work.

Novelizing Greek Myth

Colm Tóibín’s “House of Names” tries to out-Euripides Euripides.

Photo Booth

Photo Booth

A Lost Cat’s Reincarnation

When Masahisa Fukase’s kitten disappeared, and a stranger returned the wrong animal, he took the stray in anyway and made it the subject of a photo series.

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Podcasts

Reporting Cataclysm

A rookie’s account of the Vietnam War, and Maggie Haberman, of the New York Times, talks about the gang war inside the White House.

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Video

Children and Other Living Things

In this episode, Emma and the cartoonist Emily Flake talk about motherhood and their fear of puka-shell necklaces.