A roundup of TNR's culture reporting
A roundup of TNR's culture reporting Enslaved families were regularly separated. A new history chronicles the tenacious efforts of the emancipated to be reunited with their loved ones. | | | On March 25, TNR contributors Kim Kelly and Brian Goldstone introduce us to Goldstone's new book, There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America. By telling the unforgettable stories of five Atlanta families, this landmark work of journalism exposes a new and troubling trend—the dramatic rise of the "working homeless" in cities across America. | | | Jon Savage's "The Secret Public" traces the influence of queer artists on a hostile culture. | Why do Americans idealize people who found businesses? | By Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein | The show takes its time to tell the story of a Palestinian refugee living and hustling and falling in love in Texas. | Conservatives might be tempted to hold up Reagan as representative of a nobler era. They'd be wrong. | | | Lawyer Norm Eisen talks with TNR editor Michael Tomasky about the dozens of anti-Trump lawsuits he's involved with—and how he's winning. | | | Twenty-seven errors, but do they really matter? | For all of its faults and weaknesses, no serious competitor has emerged to capture people's imagination or seriously challenge it. | | | Private, unidentified security personnel dragged a woman out of the event. It raises questions not just about tolerance for dissent but about who gets deputized to do what. | | | | | Update your personal preferences for comercialyventas.aliperiodicos@blogger.com by clicking here. Our mailing address is: The New Republic, 1 Union Sq W Fl 6 , NY , New York, NY 10003-3303, United States Do you want to stop receiving all emails from Culture? Unsubscribe from this list. If you stopped getting TNR emails, update your profile to resume receiving them. | | | | |