Articles

Italy’s Olive Tree Italy’s Olive Tree

Who would have guessed a few years ago that Italy's Communists, converted or otherwise, would win control of their country's government with the blessing of the U.S.

Feb 24, 1999 / Daniel Singer

The Burden of Boris The Burden of Boris

Russia's June 16 ballot is not simply the rematch of communism vs. capitalism.

Feb 24, 1999 / Feature / Daniel Singer

The Prophet Vulgarized The Prophet Vulgarized

Trotsky is both the hero of the Russian Revolution--the mastermind of October, the founder of the Red Army--and also its Job, hounded across a "planet without a visa," his family...

Feb 24, 1999 / Books & the Arts / Daniel Singer

Mitterrand’s Legacy Mitterrand’s Legacy

François Mitterrand badly wanted to leave a mark, an imprint.

Feb 24, 1999 / Daniel Singer

Hope in a Cold Climate Hope in a Cold Climate

"It's not a revolt, Sire, or a revolution; it's the beginning of the end of the reign of big business, of capital, over the minds of the people," a courtier might have told Jacqu...

Feb 24, 1999 / Daniel Singer

When Cops Are Killers When Cops Are Killers

"Justice for Amadou Diallo!" has been the rallying cry throughout New York since four police officers gunned down the unarmed West African immigrant as he stood outside his apartme...

Feb 18, 1999 / Angela Ards

Room With a View Room With a View

A man locks his daughters in a one-room house for their first twelve years. The girls--twins--don't attend school; they don't play with other kids. They're never even given a ba...

Feb 18, 1999 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Hillary for Veep? Hillary for Veep?

It is, depending on one's perspective, a delicious and redemptive scenario, a terrible nightmare or, if you are the escapist sort that hasn't yet cottoned to the hard reality of...

Feb 18, 1999 / Elaine Lafferty

Affirmative Racism Affirmative Racism

Students across the country are gearing up to defend affirmative action on a national day of protest on February 24.

Feb 18, 1999 / Laura Flanders

Nonsilence = Death, Too? Nonsilence = Death, Too?

In seven novels and a collection of essays published since 1981, Sarah Schulman has methodically chronicled the history of her longtime neighborhood, Manhattan's East Village.

Feb 18, 1999 / Books & the Arts / Mark J. Huisman

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