History

A Witness to Total War A Witness to Total War

When Germany invaded Poland in 1939, the only neutral filmmaker in the country was Julien Bryan. His round-the-clock footage of Warsaw's destruction, assembled in Siege, is now aga...

Oct 21, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Daniel Eagan

On the Seventh Day Israel Rested On the Seventh Day Israel Rested

Israel may have won the war in 1967, but it was still looking for recognition.

Oct 20, 2009 / Feature / Stanley Wolpert

Why Did the Arabs Run? Why Did the Arabs Run?

The Nation's editor Freda Kirchwey travels to Israel and sends back an eyewitness report of the young country's struggles to survive.

Oct 20, 2009 / Feature / Freda Kirchwey

Changing the Metaphor Changing the Metaphor

For Jackson Lears, the United States remains in thrall to a bogus spiritual quest born of a refusal to face the tragedy of the Civil War.

Oct 14, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Richard White

A Gift From the Ramparts of Capital… A Gift From the Ramparts of Capital…

People shouldn't take Peace Prizes too seriously except under those rare circumstances when a prize committee somewhere gets it right.

Oct 14, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Alexander Cockburn

It Costs Money to Die It Costs Money to Die

Forty-five years before Jessica Mitford's exposè of the funeral industry, Paul Blanshard found out just how expensive dying can be.

Oct 12, 2009 / Paul Blanshard

Opting Out Opting Out

Jack Kevorkian is leading the movement to allow people to take death in their own hands.

Oct 12, 2009 / Frank A. Oski

Irving Kristol’s New Conservatism Manifesto Irving Kristol’s New Conservatism Manifesto

Irving Kristol's book reveals he's no democrat with a lowercase "d" either.

Sep 21, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Philip Green

Kristol’s Red Persuasion? Kristol’s Red Persuasion?

Drawing on his past as a Trotskyite, Irving Kristol states his case for capitalism--but cautiously.

Sep 21, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Lekachman

The African Airlift The African Airlift

The 1960 "airlift" of 800 African students to study in the United States lent a crucial boost to John F. Kennedy's popularity among African-Americans.

Sep 16, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Karen Rothmyer

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