A roundup of TNR’s culture reporting
From David Duke to John Gotti, the 1990s transformed the right and laid the groundwork for Trump. |
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Join us at 3 p.m. E.T. this Wednesday, August 14, when Colin Dickey and Laura Marsh talk about the book that has caused the Trump campaign weeks of embarrassment. Dawn’s Early Light by Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation and architect of Project 2025, outlines a disturbing and unpopular vision for the United States—which J.D. Vance endorsed in an incendiary foreword, obtained by The New Republic. Dawn’s Early Light was originally slated to hit shelves this September, but the controversy surrounding it led to the publisher pushing its release until after Election Day. The New Republic was able to read an advance copy of the book, and we believe voters should know what it says—before they go to the polls. We look forward to walking you through it. |
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There’s little evidence slouching is unhealthy. So why do Americans believe so firmly in sitting up straight? |
In 2024, the U.S. faces some of the same challenges in the region that it did in 1954. |
"Trap" is an escape-from-the-room thriller as well as a touching exploration of a father-daughter bond. |
Fury not only drives the embittered wife at the heart of "Liars," it influences the novel’s very form. |
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Yes, inflation has been punishing. But there is a mountain of good news that media have barely reported. Here’s the real record the Democrats can run on. |
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Robert and Michelle King’s show fits an enormous story about the fallibility of humankind inside a network procedural. |
J.D. Vance wrote the foreword to "Dawn’s Early Light." The rest of the book outlines an even more troubling vision. |
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Join us on Friday, August 23 as The New Republic’s Editor Michael Tomasky and staff writers Greg Sargent and Grace Segers break down the state of the 2024 presidential election campaign post DNC. |
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