Do July Jitters Mean a Nightmare in November?
The center may have held in the EU elections, but Americans are starting to tug their shirt collars.
Print Magazine
The center may have held in the EU elections, but Americans are starting to tug their shirt collars.
Republicans aren’t even trying anymore, as they cover for their dear leader, Donald Trump.
To rescue the president’s faltering campaign, Democrats need to send in their A team.
The Sunrise Movement has been hesitant to endorse Biden, and we are far from alone.
PEN America hides behind the false universalism of free speech, but institutions always choose whom to protect.
Two experts look at the data come to very different conclusions about the state of the US economy.
Writer James Kilgore and information artist Vic Liu demonstrate the improvisations and ingenuities that allow incarcerated people to experience some small human comforts.
James Kilgore and Vic Liu
I knew the journey might be dangerous. I never thought it would be this cruel.
The military-industrial complex’s hidden domination of our lives must end, which means we must dismantle it.
The Netanyahu administration seems to have learned from neighboring petrostates that spectacle can distract from ethnic cleansing.
The Democratic Party has a habit of staking its electoral hopes on its candidates’ credentials. Do voters care?
The racial justice uprisings in 2020 led to some minor achievements—and a major backlash.
The cost of psychotherapy… The Yemen script… Surface beauty… Correction…
Trump needs the state’s votes to win. But after its highest court revived an 1864 law that bans abortions, all bets are off.
From Colt to Caterpillar, American companies are earning big profits off of Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza, turning the horrors of war into boardroom victories.
Microfinance has been touted as a miracle cure for poverty in the global south. The reality has been a lot messier.
The feud between the Dutertes and the Marcoses could have dire consequences for the cold war between China and the United States.
A short history of the origins, uses, and abuses of a long hatred.
Country singer, globetrotting pop star, and now melancholic poet—Taylor Swift has offered her listeners almost everything.
The Constitution is often invoked as a safeguard for American democracy, but does it more often get in democracy’s way?
Tiya Miles’s Night Flyer is a landmark biography of one of 19th-century America’s most important figures.
A new career survey at the MoMA is a perfect illustration of the photographer's mission: to reframe how viewers see the working-class and low-income people whom she counts as kin.
The adaptation of Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel is a study of migration—between identities and countries and also between different historical periods and genres.