‘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
‘Every Carnival Has Its End’
A recent performance by the Santa Fe Opera of Don Giovanni showed what is gained—and what is lost—in demystifying its demon protagonist.
January 12, 2025
‘Their Kind of Indoctrination’
For a range of far-right activists, Trump’s second term will be a chance to discipline public schools—and ultimately defund them.
January 11, 2025
Free Speech for TikTok?
As the Supreme Court decides whether to let the US ban a hugely popular social media platform, it can either learn from its earlier mistakes or repeat them.
January 8, 2025
Passion’s Countervoices
Balzac’s The Lily in the Valley gives full-throated voice to romantic passion and at the same time contains it, inflating its rhetoric while ironizing it.
January 16, 2025 issue
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William Finnegan: California Burning“Individual fires . . . are bigger, hotter, faster, more expensive and difficult to fight, and more destructive than ever before. We have entered the era of the megafire—defined as a wildfire that burns more than 100,000 acres.”
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