As Lolita turns 50 Lila Azam Zanganeh assesses the cultural impact of Nabokov's nymphet; John Banville reviews Party in the Blitz, the final book in Nobel laureate Elias Canetti's series of memoirs; and Richard Goldstein ponders Geena Davis's telegenic version of an American President.

Letters

Editorials & Comment

  • The GOP Retreat

    : Undoing the savage inequalities of the Bush era will require a titanic fight, but the new-found courage of GOP moderates hints that significant changes are in the wind.

  • More Leaks, Please!

    Bruce Shapiro : Power-friendly reporters like Judith Miller are easily manipulated by selective leaks. But what we need now is more civil disobedience by whistleblowers exposing renditions, acts of torture and the flagrant abuse of power.

  • In Kars and Frankfurt

    Orhan Pamuk : The winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature wrote this 2005 editorial in The Nation, addressing the issue of the artistic imagination at risk in a repressive state.

  • Bush's War on the Press

    John Nichols & Robert W. McChesney : Until the Bush Administration is held accountable by Congress for its propaganda, manipulation of the truth and assaults on journalism, freedom of the press will exist in name only.

  • Spectacle

    President Thelma

    Richard Goldstein : Is Commander-in-Chief softening up the country for President Hillary? Americans may not not be ready to put a woman in the White House, but they may have calmed down enough to contemplate the pleasures of female power.

  • Emile Capouya

    Ted Solotaroff : Emile Capouya, literary editor of The Nation from 1970-1976, was both a working man and an intellectual, who brought trade book publishing to European standards and lived to oppose and be ground down by conglomerates. Subscribe

Web

  • The Secret History of Rum

    Ian Williams : Long before oil dominated geopolitics, rum was the original global commodity, tying Europe, the Americas, Africa and the Caribbean in a complex web of trade and credit. And Bacardi was the original multinational.

  • Buyers' Remorse

    Nicholas von Hoffman : Home equity--for those lucky enough to own a house or condo--is a primary source of economic security. But unsold inventory, rising interest rates and record levels of mortgage defaults are making the future look grim.

  • An Oil-Slicked Playing Field

    Dilip Hiro : The scramble for petroleum by developing countries worldwide is reshaping global geopolitics in favor of oil-rich nations like Iran, Venezuela and Sudan.

  • The War With No Name

    Christian Parenti : For twenty-five years, Kurdish guerrillas have battled the forces of the Turkish state. For a while, things began to settle down, but the US occupation of Iraq changed all that.

  • The Champ Meets the Chump

    Dave Zirin : When George W. Bush met Muhammad Ali at the White House last week, the Champ had one last rope-a-dope up his sleeve. You don't have to guess who won this match.

  • Break Up Cheney's Cabal

    Jeremy Brecher & Brendan Smith : If the United States is to extricate itself from the Iraq debacle, the first step is to break up the cabal of Bush Administration officials who have led the nation to war.

  • Scooter Libby's Doomed Defense

    Elizabeth de la Vega : Capitalizing on Bob Woodward's revelation that he was one of the first to learn about Valerie Plame's CIA status, Scooter Libby's legal team hopes that will get their client off the hook. That turkey won't fly.

December 5, 2005 Cover Cover by José Chicas/Avenging Angels

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