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2024
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Новости за 28.11.2024

The New York Review of Books 

The Import of Exports

Free trade once aligned with America’s economic and security interests, but in recent years experts have suggested pulling back from globalism and rebuilding the domestic economy.

The New York Review of Books 

Hopping Across the Line

In Soldiers and Kings, Jason De León uses the anthropological method of "deep hanging out" to offer a complicated portrait of migrant smugglers.

The New York Review of Books 

Irresistible Iris

Iris Murdoch's readers return to her to understand the relationship between high intelligence, erotic extremism, and moral virtue.

The New York Review of Books 

The Darkroom of Propaganda

It is a sad feature of the ego that it will always seek pleasure in the wrong places. Now and again, voters will crave the approval and the leniency of the thing which despises them, and that is how a felonious bigot gets to be president. To millions of decent people who might judge better […]

The New York Review of Books 

As You Like It

Sam Barlow’s video games may be the first efforts at interactive cinema—by either a game designer or a filmmaker—that work.

The New York Review of Books 

Antisystemic Times

Donald Trump has spent nearly a decade discombobulating people who are paid to think about politics. His appeal has been consistently underestimated. It has also been, just as consistently, overcomplicated. The substance of his style is simple: a gleeful hostility toward the institutions that have traditionally organized American life. He positions himself not merely as […]

The New York Review of Books 

On Abortion Rights

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, friends asked me whether I was worried for my four-year-old daughter’s future, specifically her access to legal abortion. My answer: not in California, and not with an abortion provider for a mom. In the worst-case scenario, I joked, I could perform her abortion in my […]

The New York Review of Books 

The Rise of Authoritarianism

Since about the beginning of the present century, authoritarianism has been on the rise the world over. In China, Xi Jinping has positioned himself as the country’s ruler for life, ending what had been a halting, fitful movement toward the rule of law; in Russia, Vladimir Putin has consolidated absolute power and tried to destroy […]

The New York Review of Books 

The Task of the Journalist

In the days since the election, I’ve found myself revisiting an essay on the journalist’s role in a free society by the Reverend Levi Jenkins Coppin, editor of the AME Church Review, included in Irvine Garland Penn’s influential 1891 volume The Afro-American Press and Its Editors. “The journalist is the people’s attorney,” Coppin wrote, at […]

The New York Review of Books 

Nemesis

One emerging consensus in these post-election days is that woke ideology has lost. Harris ran an impressively unwoke campaign. But as James Carville said, “we couldn’t get the stench off” the woke messages transmitted by, among others, the old white man in the White House. It’s less clear who, or what, has won. Understanding this […]

The New York Review of Books 

Words Without Consequences

I feel we’ve been circling the drain for months and now are being rinsed down the plughole. Hello, darkness, my old friend. I’m nauseous and have difficulty breathing. If I looked in the mirror—which I do often these days, purely as a function of disbelief, because I feel I no longer exist—I fancy I would […]

The New York Review of Books 

Trump at the Supreme Court

Donald Trump’s election places a new burden on a Supreme Court already operating under a harsh public spotlight. This is a Court, after all, that in recent months has rejected a constitutional challenge to Trump’s ballot eligibility and granted him a stunning measure of immunity from criminal prosecution. Going forward, the justices—including but not limited […]

The New York Review of Books 

Look Who’s Talking

When did our first linguistic ancestor emerge, and how did the transition from a nonlinguistic to a linguistic state take place?

The New York Review of Books 

A Very Quiet Symphony

Eliza Barry Callahan’s The Hearing Test seems to be about a temporary loss of hearing but is actually one woman’s rehearsal for the losses that come, unbidden, for us all.

The New York Review of Books 

Gender-Affirming Care & the Courts

The Supreme Court will rule this term on whether a Tennessee law denying minors treatment for gender dysphoria discriminates on the basis of sex.

The New York Review of Books 

You Only Live Twice

For Shakespeare’s characters the possibility of a second chance could be their undoing or their salvation. For the playwright, his words gave him many lives.

The New York Review of Books 

The Architect Who Unified America

H.H. Richardson invented a practical, adaptable style for American civic architecture that was used for decades after his death.

The New York Review of Books 

Reports from the Slaughterhouse

A century after Upton Sinclair exposed the inhumane and unhygienic conditions of Chicago’s stockyards, life for animals in America's factory farms and slaughterhouses is still gruesome.

The New York Review of Books 

The Shoals of Prose

Two recent books by poets embrace lyrical, subjective criticism to breach the porous border between verse and prose.

The New York Review of Books 

Lebanon’s Year of Living Ambiguously

After the Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah decided to draw Lebanon into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, tit-for-tat bombings along the border with Israel overshadowed the country’s political and economic plight.

The New York Review of Books 

The Barrens

North Atlantic wind tries to tear the roof off the hill, throws all the sea’s abrasives at it, but the tuckamore grew up in this house, body shaped by the timeless occupation of a back bent low, hands in the dirt, working at the fasteners. It’s hard to think of anything more modestly and completely […]

The New York Review of Books 

Intimate Theatricality

Meticulously installed domestic spaces set the tone for Mickalene Thomas's current exhibition, which features the work for which she is best known: sumptuous portraits of Black women in repose—the artist’s mother, lovers, and friends.

The New York Review of Books 

Making Germany Hate Again

In Look Away, Jacob Kushner draws a disturbing portrait of the white supremacist subculture that took hold across eastern Germany in the 1990s and now is making gains at the ballot box.

The New York Review of Books 

The Cuttlefish’s Play

Richard Powers's Playground does for oceans what his 2018 novel The Overstory did for trees: it implores us to open ourselves to the ingenuity of life beyond the human.

The New York Review of Books 

Hallelujah!

In his book Every Valley, Charles King explains the enduring appeal of Handel's Messiah since its premiere in London nearly three hundred years ago.