Print Magazine September 30, 2019, Issue Cover art by: Hanna Barczyk Purchase Current Issue or Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial ‘Dream Big, Fight Hard’: Ady Barkan Will Inspire You The dying activist tells The Nation how he wants to be remembered. Christopher Shay How the US Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Forever War In the 18 years since 9/11, war has become this country’s permanent condition, with no peaceful end in sight. The Nation Comix Nation ignore this… Read More Peter Kuper The Green New Deal Is Cheaper Than Climate Change The economic cost of allowing temperatures to rise even a couple of degrees above that target is simply staggering. Joshua Holland Kashmir Has Become a Zone of Permanent, Limitless War Modi’s blockade is designed to extinguish resistance and facilitate capital. Saiba Varma Column Congressional Races Are Our Best Shot at Gun Control Even in California, it’s too easy to turn a gun purchased legally into an assault weapon. Laila Lalami His Trusty Sharpie Pen Calvin Trillin Feature Only a Global Green New Deal Can Save the Planet And Bernie Sanders has a plan for that. Tom Athanasiou When Abortion After Rape Is Legal—but Nearly Impossible to Obtain In Mexico, doctors, nurses, hospital administrators, and public officials are all trying to prevent rape survivors from accessing legal abortion. Amy Littlefield and Laura Gottesdiener The Neo-Nazi Murder Haunting Germany The assassination of a local politician is waking up the country to the threat of the radical right. Jordan Stancil Books & the Arts The Making of Moroccan Funk Led by the Casablanca polymath Abdelakabir Faradjallah, the band Attarazat Addahabia defined the sound of the city. Marcus J. Moore Sally Rooney and the Millennial Novel of Manners Her second book, Normal People, mines the travails of Irish youth to tell a decidedly contemporary love story. Hannah Gold Have Americans Become More Conspiratorial? In their new book, Russell Muirhead and Nancy L. Rosenblum argue that a new form of conspiracy thinking is consuming our culture in dangerous and alarming ways. But is it? Sophia Rosenfeld The Grimké Sisters at Work on Theodore Dwight Weld’s ‘American Slavery as It Is’ (1838) Melissa Range The Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society Starts Its Third Annual Petition Drive for the Abolition of the Interstate Slave Trade and Slavery in Washington, DC, and the Territories (1836) Melissa Range Recent Issues See All "swipe left below to view more recent issues"Swipe → December 2024 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 See All x
‘Dream Big, Fight Hard’: Ady Barkan Will Inspire You The dying activist tells The Nation how he wants to be remembered. Christopher Shay
How the US Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Forever War In the 18 years since 9/11, war has become this country’s permanent condition, with no peaceful end in sight. The Nation
The Green New Deal Is Cheaper Than Climate Change The economic cost of allowing temperatures to rise even a couple of degrees above that target is simply staggering. Joshua Holland
Kashmir Has Become a Zone of Permanent, Limitless War Modi’s blockade is designed to extinguish resistance and facilitate capital. Saiba Varma
Congressional Races Are Our Best Shot at Gun Control Even in California, it’s too easy to turn a gun purchased legally into an assault weapon. Laila Lalami
Only a Global Green New Deal Can Save the Planet And Bernie Sanders has a plan for that. Tom Athanasiou
When Abortion After Rape Is Legal—but Nearly Impossible to Obtain In Mexico, doctors, nurses, hospital administrators, and public officials are all trying to prevent rape survivors from accessing legal abortion. Amy Littlefield and Laura Gottesdiener
The Neo-Nazi Murder Haunting Germany The assassination of a local politician is waking up the country to the threat of the radical right. Jordan Stancil
The Making of Moroccan Funk Led by the Casablanca polymath Abdelakabir Faradjallah, the band Attarazat Addahabia defined the sound of the city. Marcus J. Moore
Sally Rooney and the Millennial Novel of Manners Her second book, Normal People, mines the travails of Irish youth to tell a decidedly contemporary love story. Hannah Gold
Have Americans Become More Conspiratorial? In their new book, Russell Muirhead and Nancy L. Rosenblum argue that a new form of conspiracy thinking is consuming our culture in dangerous and alarming ways. But is it? Sophia Rosenfeld
The Grimké Sisters at Work on Theodore Dwight Weld’s ‘American Slavery as It Is’ (1838) Melissa Range
The Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society Starts Its Third Annual Petition Drive for the Abolition of the Interstate Slave Trade and Slavery in Washington, DC, and the Territories (1836) Melissa Range