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Catholic Tradition Remains at Pope Francis’s Funeral
From the daily newsletter: a dispatch from Vatican City, where the Pope was laid to rest today.
By Paul Elie
Requiem for a “Drunk Dad”
Jeff Bark’s elaborately composed scenes channel sundered American fantasies. They also function as personal folklore.
By Chris Wiley
A Politics of Fear Defines Trump’s First Hundred Days in Office
“The whole country is going through this kind of enormous, disruptive, destabilizing experience,” Susan B. Glasser says.
Trump Is the Emperor of A.I. Slop
It makes sense that a man who yearns for a reality untroubled by other humans would be drawn to art that is untouched by anything human.
By Katy Waldman
Will the Humanities Survive Artificial Intelligence?
Maybe not as we’ve known them. But, in the ruins of the old curriculum, something vital is stirring.
By D. Graham Burnett
“April” Is an Unflinching Portrait of a Doctor’s Fight for Reproductive Justice
In Dea Kulumbegashvili’s film, Ia Sukhitashvili plays a Georgian obstetrician who views a woman’s right to choose as an unshakable moral imperative.
By Justin Chang
Motherhood in the Age of Reproductive Surveillance
From the daily newsletter: what happens when we can optimize pregnancy. Plus: Susan B. Glasser on Trump’s confused desires.
By Hannah Jocelyn
What’s Legally Allowed in War
How U.S. military lawyers see Israel’s invasion of Gaza—and the public’s reaction to it—as a dress rehearsal for a potential conflict with a foreign power like China.
By Colin Jones