Plus, Patricia Lockwood's singular Covid novel; Ethan Coen's latest neo-noir caper; the super-weird origins of the right's hatred of the Smithsonian; and more culture reporting from The New Republic...
A roundup of TNR's culture reporting By restricting circulation of his work and cultivating an intimate yet prominent group of friends who championed it, the "poet of Alexandria" helped ensure his stature would only grow after his death. | | | Join The New Republic and David Blight, Yale University's Sterling Professor of History, for a discussion about how Trump is trying to change our sense of who we are. Blight will be joined by historian James Grossman, Northwestern University's Leslie Harris, and Carleton College's Amna Khalid to outline how we can fight to preserve our history as well as democracy. | | | The new TV series on FX trades in the brutal simplicity and narrative economy of the Alien franchise for something rangier and looser. | Will There Ever Be Another You is a lyrical, chaotic journal of holy and profane dispatches from our grief-soaked timeline. | Witty energy and zingy one-liners can't quite keep Ethan Coen's neo-noir caper together. | {{#if }} Labor Day Sale: Become a TNR Member for 50% Off | Get the most out of TNR's breaking news and in-depth analysis with our membership subscriptions, featuring exclusive benefits that help you dive deeper into today's top stories. | {{/if}} | | TNR Travel: New Dates Added | Join a special group of readers and supporters on a lovingly designed, all-inclusive tour of one of the most spellbinding places in the world. Drawing on The New Republic's special contacts among local historians, artists, and chefs, we've created a first-class experience that will immerse you in Cuba's colorful and unique history, politics, and culture. | | | A new animated series by the creator of BoJack Horseman escapes the familiar structures of the genre for something wilder and more discomfiting. | The Trump administration has stepped up its antagonism of America's treasured museums. But conservative antipathy toward the institution began long ago—with the bones of Bible giants. | Kathy Roberts Forde, a journalism historian at UMass Amherst, argues much of the media was pro-authoritarian in the Jim Crow era and should not repeat that history today. | By Right Now With Perry Bacon | What subscribers are reading: | Fox News hosts are joking about military intervention to stop male cheerleaders. The panic reveals what conservatives really want: LGBTQ people to disappear. | In the opening credits of Spike Lee's Highest 2 Lowest, the camera glides over the East River, admiring an Elysian New York City skyline against a peachy sunrise. Skyscrapers parade like diamond obelisks across the screen, while the booming baritone of Gordon MacRae, singing "Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'" from Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma!, augments this dreamy decadence: Everything's going my way. Indeed. At the very top of the tallest building in the neighborhood, the camera settles on David King (Denzel Washington), a powerful music executive taking a business call on his penthouse's balcony. He's a tower among towers, quite literally, his reflection on his dwelling's glazed exterior cast against Manhattan's silhouette. This rapturous introduction swiftly establishes a kind of epic context—a grand city, a great man, played by one of the movie world's most virtuosic stars—and we haven't even stepped inside yet. | | | The president's assault on the independence of the Federal Reserve is only the latest of several reckless economic actions that have put the country on the brink of economic disaster. | | | | | 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. | | | | |