After President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered martial law, the legislature voted to impeach him. But it could take months to remove ...
The year’s breakthrough music moments included a Taylor Swift comeback, an unexpected Internet-rap collab, and an absurdist ...
The scramble is on to define the future of Syria, quickly, to avert a war even more divisive than the conflict that has riven ...
A new kind of prosthetic limb depends on carbon fibre and computer chips—and the reëngineering of muscles, tendons, and bone.
The sociologist Musa al-Gharbi argues that the “Great Awokening” alienated “normie voters,” making it difficult for Kamala ...
The author discusses her story “Revision.” ...
Thanks to the maneuverings of the tiny nation of Vanuatu, the entire industrialized world is effectively on trial in The ...
Marielle Heller’s adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s novel, starring Amy Adams, omits most of the protagonist’s inner life and ...
The Brutalist,” the director’s nearly four-hour study of immigration, identity, and marriage, flowed from his own struggle to ...
The family members regularly break into impressively harmonized, Osmond-family-level carol arrangements that they’ve clearly ...
On Chris Wray’s self-defenestration and the dilemma of being on the pugilistic President-elect’s target list.
Health insurers and hospitals increasingly treat patients less as humans in need of care than consumers who generate profit.