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“The destruction I saw there was astonishing.” A detailed account from a doctor who, during the brief ceasefire, spent nine ...
Harvey’s frames portray a convergence of human and natural action, not to synthesize or balance the two but to show the possibilities when vision and composition amplify the magic of the natural world ...
In Courtney Stephens and Callie Hernandez’s dizzying docu-fiction, an Edenic landscape becomes a backdrop for duplicity and ...
A professor at M.I.T. on how Xi Jinping is likely to respond to U.S. tariffs and why the standoff won’t weaken the Chinese ...
Pope Francis has long advocated for immigrants, refugees, and the vulnerable—but the Church, like other institutions, may ...
Ryan Coogler’s vampire movie mines vampirism’s symbolic potential to tell a tale of exploitation and Black music in ...
From the daily newsletter: as the Administration flirts with contempt of court, two federal judges are trying to uphold the ...
In the ruins of a health-care system, many medical facilities have become graveyards. Doctors continue to deliver lifesaving care—but they risk their own lives in the process.
New productions of Shakespeare’s “Richard II,” Annie Ernaux’s “The Years,” Robert Icke’s “Manhunt,” Tennessee Williams’s “The ...
Fourteen years after the Fukushima disaster, nuclear power is being rebranded as a climate savior, and fission is in fashion.
A legal scholar argues that the judiciary’s “passive-aggressive approach” to the Trump Administration is doomed to fail.
You are all magnetic and user-centric examples of how, when we benchmark blue-sky thinking, even in a pre-tax, ...
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