In school or outside of school? The Masthead debates the best setting for students to learn critical thinking.
The upcoming presidential election will be the fork in the road for some of America’s biggest decisions.
Washington State decided to let colleges use race in admissions decisions. But the public might change its mind.
The upcoming European elections will be a key indicator of how the British people feel about Brexit.
Companies want to collect your data in public spaces. Saying no is getting harder.
To understand the spectacle of the artist’s “Sunday service” at Coachella, look to Walter Benjamin’s 1935 essay on the religious origin of idols.
Activists can succeed in China, as long as they follow the ever-changing rules for dissent.
Avengers: Endgame is the culmination of a new moviemaking concept disrupting cinema.
Cities are experimenting with nudging their citizens into environmental action.
Robert D. Kaplan’s “The Coming Anarchy” was a pessimistic masterpiece. But its bleak predictions didn’t all pan out.
The state’s stumbles show that even a 2020 win might not be enough for Democrats to make the policy changes they want.
Peng Liyuan is influential because of, not despite, the Chinese government’s misogyny.
Turns out, many people eat the same thing for lunch every day with pride.
Frank O’Hara’s poem “Ave Maria” exhorts belief in the unforeseen and uncontrollable.
The economic historian Adam Tooze sees the consequences of 2008 everywhere.
Conor Friedersdorf asks about the foreign actors targeting America’s public discourse.
A still-life photographer discusses her craft.
A historical briefing on the legacy of the Soviet withdrawal
The terror group’s about to lose its “state.” That doesn’t mean it’s defeated.
Bill Burns revisits NATO enlargement and other stories from a relationship gone bad.