Culture

George McGovern, Prairie Populist George McGovern, Prairie Populist

The 1972 Democratic presidential nominee, who died at 90 on October 21, embraced and inspired the struggle for peace and economic and social justice.

Oct 24, 2012 / Books & the Arts / The Editors

Foreign Policy Debate Foreign Policy Debate

Mitt seemed to agree with Obama a lot. Divergence in policy got hard to spot. He used all the moderate words he could muster. So where was the Mittster’s past neocon bluster? He knew that those still undecided would hate it. The answer then is that the Etch A Sketch ate it.

Oct 24, 2012 / Column / Calvin Trillin

What Republicans Can Learn From the Cold War

What Republicans Can Learn From the Cold War What Republicans Can Learn From the Cold War

The realization that markets need government saved capitalism after World War II.

Oct 23, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Melvyn P. Leffler

What’s Behind the Right’s ‘Obama Is Gay’ Conspiracy

What’s Behind the Right’s ‘Obama Is Gay’ Conspiracy What’s Behind the Right’s ‘Obama Is Gay’ Conspiracy

The wing-nuttery’s gaybaiting is not just a fringe phenomenon—it’s part of an old Republican tradition of macho posturing against Democrats.

Oct 23, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Neal Gabler

The Master’s Servants: On Henry James

The Master’s Servants: On Henry James The Master’s Servants: On Henry James

Nothing ages faster than the idea of an “ageless” writer. Consider the posthumous career of Henry James.

Oct 23, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Leo Robson

The Delirium Scale: The Fiftieth New York Film Festival

The Delirium Scale: The Fiftieth New York Film Festival The Delirium Scale: The Fiftieth New York Film Festival

Among the standouts at this year’s NYFF are Christian Mungiu’s Beyond the Hills and Dror Moreh’s The Gatekeepers.

Oct 23, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

In the Country of No Country In the Country of No Country

In the country the buildings seem smooth as if their faces were lifted by benevolent surgeons— so laid-back, they rarely make a mistake.   And their doors—true the wood seems insecure when bothered by cathedral fantasies but they remain upright, with a steadfast reach like people who speak clearly in crisis.   To some the local is not alive—it is a process that has stopped, like a factory machine the day of the big shutdown.   But to others, who see past the horizon of the cliché industry returns to the valley an extravagant, steampunk renaissance fair.

Oct 23, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Jerome Sala

John Lennon and George McGovern: Another Side of the 1972 Campaign

John Lennon and George McGovern: Another Side of the 1972 Campaign John Lennon and George McGovern: Another Side of the 1972 Campaign

The McGovern campaign marked a turning point in many lives, including John Lennon’s.

Oct 22, 2012 / Jon Wiener

A Simple Guide to Every Single Republican Tax Proposal A Simple Guide to Every Single Republican Tax Proposal

(As verified by 178 independent studies)   Sure, sometimes they call it supply-side, And sometimes they say job creation Is risked if our entrepreneurs Think profits get snatched by taxation. It comes to the same simple credo Around which the party has danced: If rich people pay less in taxes, Then everyone’s life is enhanced.

Oct 17, 2012 / Column / Calvin Trillin

After the Euphoria: On the Arab Uprisings After the Euphoria: On the Arab Uprisings

What are the new rules of the political game in the Middle East? Nobody knows, but Marc Lynch’s The Arab Uprising is a useful guide.

Oct 16, 2012 / Books & the Arts / Patrick Cockburn

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