Read The New Yorker’s complete coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.
Protest Delivered the Nineteenth Amendment
The amendment, ratified a century ago, is often described as having “given” women the right to vote. It wasn’t a gift; it was a hard-won victory achieved after more than seventy years of suffragist agitation.
Homeland Security Was Destined to Become a Secret Police Force
This is a government agency built on fear and intended to engender fear.
Swifts and the Fantasy of Escape
During the coronavirus pandemic, birds are doing the travel that we can’t.
“Theatre Can’t Miss This Moment”: An Interview with Audra McDonald
The actress on color-blind casting, virtual performance, and learning how to trust her own power.
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Spotlight
Is It Time to Defund the Department of Homeland Security?
In recent years, the department’s enforcement agenda—including the recent incursion in Portland—has fallen into the direct service of President Trump’s reëlection efforts.
“St. Louis Blues,” a Thrilling Showcase for Nat King Cole and Others
The cast of Allen Reisner’s 1958 bio-pic about the composer W. C. Handy is among the most distinguished in the history of cinema.
“The Far Side” Returns to a Weird World
The single-panel comic was confidently modern, and came not just as a minor thrill but as a relief. This month, its creator published new “Far Side” comics, for the first time in twenty-five years, online.
The Online Movement to #FreeBritney
Fans, concerned about a conservatorship that controls Britney Spears’s estate, have begun parsing her Instagram account for clues about her well-being.
Taylor Swift’s Intimate “Indie” Album, “folklore”
Swift has turned inward, coming up with a record that feels right for the moment.
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“The Far Side” Returns to a Weird World
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America’s Looming Primary-Care Crisis
- 5.Blitt’s Kvetchbook
Trump Aces the Cognitive Test
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The Latest
Obama Passes Cognitive Test by Reciting the First Fifty Digits of Pi
Obama took the test voluntarily, he said, in order to reassure his employers at Netflix that he was “of sound mind.”
New Yorker Favorites
From This Week’s Issue
Eye-Catching Art for an Unprecedented Summer, in “Monuments Now”
The outdoor exhibition at Socrates Sculpture Park includes Jeffrey Gibson’s kaleidoscopic ziggurat “Because Once You Enter My House, It Becomes Our House,” performances by indigenous American artists, and more.
From 2014: The Rise and Fall of Cesar Chavez
How the labor leader disserved his dream.
From 1967: Columbia’s Overdue Apology to Langston Hughes
Seven months after the death of the Black writer, Professor James P. Shenton acknowledged at a memorial, “For a while, there lived a poet down the street from Columbia, and Columbia never took the time to find out what he was about.”
From 1948: “The Lottery”
From 1948: “The people had done it so many times that they only half listened to the directions; most of them were quiet, wetting their lips, not looking around.”
Video
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Responds to Verbal Abuse by Ted Yoho
In a speech on the House floor, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says Ted Yoho’s profane slur on the Capitol steps is part of a larger problem faced by all women.