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In Tod Papageorge’s photographs of L.A. beachgoers in the nineteen-seventies and eighties, he transforms formally challenging ...
Revisiting the origins of American democracy. By Jill Lepore. In 1938, if you had a dollar and seventy-two cents, you could ...
So it was telling that the only victory on the floor that Democrats scored during the hours of drama this week leading up to ...
In the spirit of summer travel, we’ve asked some of our writers living outside New York City to share a few of their favorite ...
On “Virgin,” her fourth and latest album, Lorde examines the myths that make up her identity. This introspection comes after ...
Dalloway,” or even “To the Lighthouse.” In fact, it comes from “Unknown Man No. 89,” a 1977 novel by Elmore Leonard. The man ...
She could sit on a bench in Europe completely unmolested, without a single human being saying a word to her, until the sun ...
He was nothing and nobody, and nobody cared, and he thought that everyone was watching him, that even I was watching him.
“A victory, basically, for Combs.” A reflection on the trial of Sean Combs, in which the rapper was acquitted of the most ...
Voices Lost in Snow” ran in The New Yorker in 1976, though I discovered it almost two decades later, in a discarded library ...
As some Wall Street billionaires melt down over Zohran Mamdani’s policy platform, a prominent progressive economist argues ...
In Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, the sport has not only its next great rivalry but a moment that highlights everything ...