Life Made Light
The twenty-eight Vermeer paintings assembled at the Rijksmuseum this year were a testament to how he is understood today: as an artist of the interior, a master of subjects at once alluring and enigmatic.
July 20, 2023 issue
The Land Remains
Palestinians in the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem live under an ever-worsening regime of state repression and settler violence.
July 6, 2023
The Pregnancy Plot
In Reproduction, Louisa Hall combines a science-fiction riff on Frankenstein with the isolating reality of pregnancy in the contemporary United States.
July 20, 2023 issue
Keeping Speech Robust and Free
The case of New York Times v. Sullivan set a vital standard in libel law. Could the clash between Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems dismantle it—and at what cost?
July 20, 2023 issue
Vacationland
Morgan Talty’s stories about a Penobscot family are set where Maine’s millions of tourists don’t tend to go: in places damaged by toxic pollutants or opioids, bankrupted by government inaction, devoured by poverty, haunted by our country’s colonial past.
July 20, 2023 issue
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Cass R. Sunstein: How Independent Is the Court?“The belief in judicial independence must be put in question in any period in which the meaning of the Constitution tends to follow the policies and values of those who appointed the justices.”
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