Summer Solstice
Celestial Phenomenon Over Nuremberg, Hans Glaser, woodcut engraving (1561). Courtesy: Public Domain Review
Week of June 24, 2021
Global Mobility
T. Alexander Aleinikoff, “Can Refugee Scholars Hold the Line? Why the theoretical line that separates forced migrants from other persons on the move may not be sustainable.” (June 21, 2021)
Classics Reconsidered
Erich Christansen, “I Read Mein Kampf So That You Don’t Have To: Four aspects of Hitler’s manifesto that matter for us today.” (June 22, 2021)
Politics
César J. Castillo Garcia, “How the Left Took Power in Peru: Castillo imagines a new politics.” (June 23, 2021)
Alison Frank Johnson and Emily Greble, “Soccer and the Enduring Nonsense of Race: Austrian Marko Arnautović’s verbal assault on North Macedonia’s Ezgjan Alioski raises questions about race and nation in Europe’s past and present.” (June 21, 2021)
Our columnists
Claire Potter, “Ethel Rosenberg’s Story: Anne Sebba’s new biography liberates this radical woman from a concocted Cold War narrative that concealed her courage.” (June 23, 2021)
Pat Garafolo, “Michigan’s Midwestern Pact: A bipartisan compact bill with lots of sponsors!” (June 23, 2021)
Heather Cox Richardson, “Not One Senate Republican Is For the People: The right to vote is under assault as the GOP defends a government by white men, for white men.” (June 23, 2021)
John Stoehr, “Conservative Democrats are Telling Stories About Republicans that Republicans Keep Blowing Up: Will being made a fool change Joe Manchin’s mind? Probably.” (June 22, 2021)