What Spielberg, Lucas, and Coppola Got Right
In revisiting the trio of auteurs who reinvented filmmaking in the 1970s, a new book shows that creativity thrives on collaboration.

In revisiting the trio of auteurs who reinvented filmmaking in the 1970s, a new book shows that creativity thrives on collaboration.

The actor, playwright, and self-made cowboy was also a poet of masculine angst.

Are environmental crusaders like Douglas Tompkins good for the planet?

Over the past half century, siding with the powerful against the vulnerable has been the rule in almost every area of the law.

The justice’s reactionary legal philosophy rests on faith in the power of adversity to fuel black progress.

The chief justice writes fiercely conservative opinions, yet champions the Court’s political independence. How will he respond to a constitutional crisis?

The lessons of Eisenhower’s civil-rights struggle with his chief justice Earl Warren

The Supreme Court justice may have left a stronger legacy off the bench.

Fifty years later, new accounts of its fraught passage reveal the era's real hero—and it isn’t the Supreme Court.
