To Stop the Slaughter in Gaza, We Need the Broadest Coalition Possible
People with very different visions of what a just peace looks like must work together to stop this war.
Print Magazine
People with very different visions of what a just peace looks like must work together to stop this war.
It’s time for Americans to claw their lives back from work.
Excerpts from the diary of Atef Abu Saif, who has been in Gaza since October 7.
There are far more insights to be found in this week’s elections than in theoretical surveys about a vote that won’t happen for a year.
The president’s full-throated support of Israel’s war in Gaza continues to hurt him with young voters and voters of color—and the threat that Trump would be worse isn't resonating.
The new speaker of the House says he's a history buff. But has he learned from it, or is he condemned to repeat it?
For far too long, Palestinians have been denied the freedom to tell our own story.
As a drag show was taking place in the North Carolina region, an attack on the electrical grid shut the power down.
The state is now firmly held by Republicans, but organizers found a way to reach voters who are appalled by the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Conversations with Jane Hirshfield, poet of the present moment.
In Zones of Interest and Occupied City, the two filmmakers attempt to depict the ordinary fascism and everyday violence of World War II.
New books by Timothy Garton Ash and Loukas Tsoukalis document the moral and political exhaustion of the “EU” generation.
By working within the constraints of the WPA, artists like Philip Guston discovered new modes of representation and irony.
In The Sickness Unto Death, the Danish philosopher posed a difficult question: Is despair an essential feature of human life?