Books & the Arts
The Past and Future of Latinx Politics
Two new books look at the history of Latinx Democrats and Republicans and the role each will play in the future.
Ed MoralesMaria Reva’s Mordant and Profound Fiction
In her short story collection, Good Citizens Need Not Fear, Reva documents the chaos, joy, and serendipity of life before and after the fall of the Soviet Union.
Jennifer WilsonRun the Jewels’ Wake-up Call
While other mainstream rappers might create one song or one album dedicated to the unrest, Killer Mike and El-P have carried that torch for six years.
Marcus J. MooreFrom the Magazine
The Troubling Origins of Birthright Politics
Two new works of history examine how the politics of birthright citizenship can be a vehicle for liberation and equality and serve the cause of exclusion.
Nathan Perl-RosenthalThe Racist Roots of New Technology
From facial recognition to VR, Ruha Benjamin’s new book illuminates how cutting-edge tech reproduces inequalities.
Stephen KearseSarah Broom’s New Orleans Saga
In her new memoir, Broom reconstructs not only her family’s history in New Orleans but also the larger arc of black experience in the South.
Lovia GyarkyeHistory & Politics
How Should Unions Organize?
In A Collective Bargain, Jane McAlevey makes the case for strike-ready unions and whole worker organizing. But in an age of globalized economies and climate change, is this enough?
E. Tammy KimThe Making of the Radical Republicans
How did the struggle for emancipation become a mass politics?
Eric FonerThe Worlds of Edward Said
An exile who made the world his home, Said infused his literary style with a cosmopolitan ease and his political commitments with a cosmopolitan ethics.
Rashid KhalidiPolitics and Literature
Lorraine Hansberry’s Radicalism
For the playwright and activist, neither liberal reform nor countercultural art were enough. The very foundations of American democracy needed to be transformed.
Elias RodriquesIn October of 1964, three months after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, Lorraine Hansberry’s play The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window opened on Broadway. At the time, Hansberry was already famous for A Raisin in the Sun, but the intervening years had not been kind. Shingles racked her… Continue Reading >
Literary Criticism
The Journalism of Gabriel García Márquez
His fiction and nonfiction can be seen as facets of a single, lifelong narrative enterprise.
Tony WoodLauren Wilkinson’s Novel of Race, Empire, and Espionage
American Spy examines the intersections between spycraft and living in America as a black person.
Jennifer WilsonMary Gaitskill’s Art of Loneliness
Through her portraits of solitude, Gaitskill forces us to recognize those moments of subtle connection.
Maggie DohertyTelevision and Films
Kelly Reichardt’s Anti-Capitalist Vision of Frontier America
Her latest film, First Cow, challenges the myths of Americana by telling the stories of peripheral, ordinary figures.
Phoebe ChenMati Diop’s ‘Atlantics’ Is a Startling Study of Power
As the contemporary film landscape heralds the coming of a class war, Diop’s beautiful movie reckons with capital and labor in groundbreaking fashion.
Namwali SerpellThe Beautiful, Baffling Mysteries of Paolo Sorrentino’s Vatican
His television series, The Young Pope and The New Pope, tell us a story bigger than one focused on just church or state.
Erin SchwartzHistory
How Silicon Valley Broke the Economy
The question of how to fix the tech industry is now inseparable from the question of how to fix the system of capitalism that the late 20th century gave us.
Adrian ChenOne of Apple cofounder Steve Jobs’s most audacious marketing triumphs is rarely mentioned in the paeans to his genius that remain a staple of business content farms. In 1982, Jobs offered to donate a computer to every K–12 school in America, provided Congress pass a bill giving Apple substantial tax… Continue Reading >
Poems
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May 21, 2019
Mange Meat
Alicia Mountain -
May 21, 2019
Twenty-First Century Woman / Ankle-Length Cardigans / Looking in the Mirror
Amanda Nadelberg -
April 23, 2019
Dear Melissa—
TC Tolbert -
April 23, 2019
Love Prodigal
Traci Brimhall
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Why Has Society Failed to Integrate Grief Into Public Life?
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The Limits of Trans Representation as We Know It
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What Are Art Galleries For?
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In Memoriam: Michael Sorkin, 1948–2020
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Living in the Shadow of Notre Dame
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The Bare Ruined Choirs of Notre Dame
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Between Mystery and Social Democracy: A Journey Through Scandinavian Crime Novels
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Harry Dodge’s ‘My Meteorite’ Is Like a Wonderful Sculpture
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How Does One Tell the Story of Asian America?
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Why Has Society Failed to Integrate Grief Into Public Life?
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Donald Trump’s Many Pandemic Blunders
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Jenny Zhang’s Goo Aesthetics
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The Coronavirus Means Curtains for Artists
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Dismantling Transphobia at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival
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What Does It Mean to Remember AIDS?
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Maria Reva’s Mordant and Profound Fiction
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Between Mystery and Social Democracy: A Journey Through Scandinavian Crime Novels
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Mary Gaitskill’s Art of Loneliness
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The Limits of Trans Representation as We Know It
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The World Is Finally Catching Up to Spike Lee
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A Lavender League of Their Own
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What Are Art Galleries For?
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How Visual Culture Is Implicated in Mass Incarceration
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Gimmicks Might Be the Key to Understanding Capitalism
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Letting Go of Robert E. Lee at Washington and Lee University
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What About the International Students?
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With Covid-19, We Need to Rethink the Youth Vote
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A Lesbian Archive Sends Its Love Letter: Find History, Find Yourself
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How Latin Got Woke
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Nate Chinen’s Daring New History of Modern Jazz
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‘We Are Not Even Beginning to Be Over This Pandemic’
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Black Visibility Matters—and Not Just During Trauma
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The Climate Emergency Won’t Wait for the Press to Play Catch-up Again
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Will the Public Internet Survive?
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Máirtín Ó Cadhain: Found in Translation
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Tony Tulathimutte’s Worst-Case Scenarios