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The New Republic
LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
CLIMATE
CULTURE
MAGAZINE
NEWSLETTERS
PODCASTS
GAMES
Culture Homepage
Books
Film
Television
Poetry
Michael Kimmage
The New York Intellectuals’ Battle of the Sexes
Norman Mailer’s generation learned to “write like men.” But their female contemporaries from Mary McCarthy to Diana Trilling pioneered a more enduring style.
Jess Bergman
Hari Kunzru’s Escape From the Art Market
“Blue Ruin” is a sharp novel about art, authenticity, success, and disaster.
Ben Metzner
An Insider’s Portrait of Obama-Era Hope—and Disillusionment
Ben Metzner
An Insider’s Portrait of Obama-Era Hope—and Disillusionment
Books & the Arts
Last Summer
Is a Marvel of Toxic Lyricism
Adam Nayman
Adam Nayman
Last Summer
Is a Marvel of Toxic Lyricism
Is the United States Too Devoted to the Constitution?
John Fabian Witt
John Fabian Witt
Is the United States Too Devoted to the Constitution?
Is the United States Too Devoted to the Constitution?
John Fabian Witt
John Fabian Witt
Is the United States Too Devoted to the Constitution?
The Case for Taking Reality TV Seriously
Phillip Maciak
Phillip Maciak
The Case for Taking Reality TV Seriously
The Case for Taking Reality TV Seriously
Phillip Maciak
Phillip Maciak
The Case for Taking Reality TV Seriously
Richard J. Evans
Can the Museum Survive?
From looted artifacts to rogue employees, a series of crises have beset some of the world’s most visited collections.
Hannah Zeavin
The Woman Behind Freud’s First Case Study
The case of Anna O. showed that psychoanalysis worked. Did Freud tamper with it?