January 31, 2005
Bring America‘s most incisive writers and editors to your classroom with free teaching material from The Nation.
· FREE Weekly Teaching Guides and Educator Email Newsletter
· Discounted subscriptions.
To download the teaching guide click here
-
Feature
-
-
Big-League Radio
George Bush had best be careful when he fiddles with the radio dial in the presidential limousine on Inauguration Day.
John Nichols
-
-
A Fight We Can Win
The results of the last election of 2004 could foretell the first serious defeat for the Bush Administration’s agenda in the new Congress.
John Nichols
-
-
Editorial
-
-
-
-
None So Blind
A triumphant George W. Bush, emboldened by finally being elected to office, will inaugurate his second term on January 20.
The Editors
-
Dr. Dean Calling
Howard Dean elbowed his way into the 2005 contest for the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee with the same unbridled energy, litany of ideas big and small and outsized self-confide
John Nichols
-
GET UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS FOR LESS THAN $3 A MONTH!
-
Column
Pomp and Improper Circumstance
Some might say it’s tacky to rain on the President’s parade, but two crucial news stories compel it.
Robert Scheer
-
Pundit Limbo: How Low Can They Go?
What do Robert Novak and Armstrong Williams have to do before they’re completely discredited?
Eric Alterman
-
Buying In, Selling Out
“The black pseudo leader is a parasite,” wrote black pseudo-leader Armstrong Williams in October 2004.
Patricia J. Williams
-
-
Books & the Arts
The Rebirth of the Modern
The letterhead of Columbia University, where I taught for four decades, reads in full “Columbia University in the City of New York,” not because there is much likelihood that anyone will wonder w
Arthur C. Danto
-
Beyond Good and Evil
Adorno said, as we all know, that writing poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric. This is not to say, as many imagine, that writing poetry after Auschwitz is to be forbidden, or is impossible.
John Banville
-
The Commerce of Commemoration
Andrew Rice covered commercial real estate development for the New York Observer from 2000 until 2002.
Andrew Rice
-
-
Pundit Limbo: How Low Can They Go?
What do Robert Novak and Armstrong Williams have to do before they’re completely discredited?
Eric Alterman
-
-
The stakes are higher now than ever. Get The Nation in your inbox.
-
Letters