‘Never Too Much’
If globalization has allowed elites to remove themselves from democratic accountability and regulation, is there any path toward a just economy?
January 16, 2025 issue
What Labor Could Lose
After four years under Jennifer Abruzzo, who fought to revitalize its mission, the National Labor Relations Board finds itself more threatened than ever.
January 19, 2025
‘Haunted, Haunted’
The characters in Mike Leigh’s new feature, anchored by a magnificent performance by Marianne Jean-Baptiste, hardly seem to be living in his usual noisy democracy.
January 16, 2025
Tinker Tailor Soldier Sigh
Where we might have expected a show about the state of the nation, the spy series Slow Horses instead examines the state of the office.
January 18, 2025
Bidenomics: Farewell to an Idea?
Joe Biden pursued as transparently assertive an industrial policy as any since the mobilization for World War II. Why did it fail to win over voters?
January 15, 2025
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Simon Leys: The Imitation of Our Lord Don Quixote“The notion of ‘literary classic’ has a solemn ring about it. But Don Quixote, which is the classic par excellence, was written for a flatly practical purpose: to amuse the largest possible number of readers, in order to make a lot of money for the author (who needed it badly).”
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