Tag Archives: Magazines
FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE (06.30.25): The latest issue features ‘The Historical Presidency’ – Nine essays on what the global past reveals about our confounding present…
The End of Modernity
A crisis is unfolding before our eyes—and also in our heads. By Christopher Clark
Why Compare the Present to the Past?
Thinking via historical analogy has become the preferred way to confront our anxieties. Ivan Krastev, Leonard Benardo
Is This an American Cultural Revolution?
Liberal critics charge Trump with creating a cult of personality not unlike Mao Zedong’s. Julia Lovell, Nicholas Guyatt
Russia Has Started Losing the War in Ukraine
The military tide may have turned against Putin. Michael Kimmage
APOLLO MAGAZINE – JULY/AUGUST 2025

APOLLO MAGAZINE (06.30.25): The latest issue features ‘Queen Sonja pops to the Factory’…
In this issue
The Queen of Norway’s very modern art collection
The Gilded Age – is greed good again?
Emily Kam Kngwarray lights up Tate Modern
An interview with Erin Shirreff
Plus: Cinecittà in focus, Wangechi Mutu at the Galleria Borghese, the light touch of Antoine Watteau, Egypt’s new home for antiquities, how polenta caused a stir in Venice, the Aspen art scene continues to snowball, and the revival of London’s art market; in reviews: Amy Sherald’s portraits, King James VI and I’s cultural legacy, and what is a Jewish country house?
Queen Sonja pops to the Factory
The rocky history of Lismore Castle
THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – JULY 7 & 14, 2025 PREVIEW

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest issue features Malika Favre’s “Literary Heights”…
Trump, Congress, and the War Powers Resolution
How we got to a situation where a President can reasonably claim that it is lawful, without congressional approval, to bomb a country that has not attacked the U.S. By Jeannie Suk Gersen
Anne Enright’s Literary Journeys to Australia and New Zealand
The Booker Prize-winning author recommends three works by writers who, thanks to geography, may have never received their due.
What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing?
The demise of the English paper will end a long intellectual tradition, but it’s also an opportunity to reëxamine the purpose of higher education. By Hua Hsu
SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE – JULY/AUGUST 2025

SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE (June 27, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Hemingway in Pamplona’….
A Search for the World’s Best Durian, the Divisive Fruit That’s Prized—and Reviled
Devotees of the crop journey to a Malaysian island to find the most fragrant and tasty specimens
Tom Downey Photographs by Annice Lyn
Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of ‘Jaws’ With 15 Shark Snapshots
Archaeologists Say They’ve Pieced Together the Ancient Fragments of the ‘World’s Most Difficult Jigsaw Puzzle’
SCIENCE MAGAZINE – JUNE 27, 2025 RESEARCH PREVIEW

All-seeing eye
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is set to transform astronomy. Its wide and fast survey will discover billions of dynamic objects while building up a deep map of the universe
Microbe with tiny genome may evolve into a virus
With DNA focused almost entirely on replication, newly discovered organism blurs the line between cells and viruses
Congress shows signs of resisting proposed science cuts
Lawmakers reject some cuts, question others
Radio bursts reveal universe’s ‘missing matter’
Mystery signals used to locate gases in the spaces between galaxies
THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – JUNE 28, 2025 PREVIEW
THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue features How to win the peace…
How to win peace in the Middle East
After the bombs should come a plan to reset the region
RFK’s loopy approach to vaccines endangers Americans
Donald Trump’s health secretary undermines global public health, too
How the defence bonanza will reshape the global economy
As they spend big, politicians must resist using one pot of money to achieve many goals
Chinese brands are sweeping the world. Good
From fast food to video games, new marques are making their mark
THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JUNE 27, 2025 PREVIEW

How will Israel’s conflict with Iran play out? Only a brave person, or perhaps a weekly news magazine, would try to foresee the outcomes of a war in which the contours have shifted almost by the hour.
After the United States bombed Iran’s key nuclear facilities last weekend – and Tehran responded with a choreographed missile attack on a US base in Qatar – Donald Trump declared a ceasefire, clearly hoping that would be the end of it. Initially at least, Iran and Israel appeared not to have got the memo, provoking a sweary outburst from the US president on the White House lawn. But as of Wednesday, a fragile truce appeared to be holding (follow our latest coverage here).
How will Israel’s conflict with Iran play out? Only a brave person, or perhaps a weekly news magazine, would try to foresee the outcomes of a war in which the contours have shifted almost by the hour.
Julian Borger takes up the story of how the US was drawn into Israel’s war with Tehran and how it pulled off a remarkable, top-secret operation. And in another excellent commentary, Nesrine Malik laments an impotent western liberal political establishment that makes appeals for cool heads and diplomacy, but is entirely incapable of addressing the problem, namely its own lack of a moral compass or care for the norms it claims to uphold.
Five essential reads in this week’s edition
Spotlight | Russia surpasses 1 million casualties in Ukraine war
As the grim tally of Moscow’s invasion is reached, an expansive propaganda campaign and state payouts are keeping grieving relatives onside. Pjotr Sauer reports
Science | A bug’s life: small ways to make a big change
Insect species are under threat around the world but there are simple, science-backed actions we can all take to stem their decline. Tess McClure and Patrick Greenfield find out how
Feature | The mommas and the poppas
Italian-style late family meals, bed-sharing like the Germans, breaking down gender stereotypes the Icelandic way … f ive Guardian writers try f ive dif ferent European parenting styles. Will they make it out unscathed?
Opinion | From LA to London, the populist right hates our cities
Once a conservative stronghold; Los Angeles is now occupied by the military. Liberal cities have become targets for politicians looking to stir up voters elsewhere, argues Andy Beckett
Culture | Danny Boyle on risks, regrets and returning to the undead
In 28 Years Later, zombies maraud over a Britain broken by more than Brexit. Its director talks to Xan Brooks about cultural baggage, catastrophising – and why his kids’ generation is an ‘upgrade’
DRIFT MAGAZINE – SUMMER 2025 LITERARY PREVIEW

THE DRIFT MAGAZINE (June 24, 2025): The latest issue Fifteen features It’s morning in America. Daphne, chased by Apollo, grows hooves. We live in an age of conspiracism and insincerity. Spring and summer will not follow. Staying below two degrees might be a challenge. It’d be corny to call it Orwellian. We reached the limits of what moral outrage can do. Miraculously, we still made decisions. Acting recklessly. Lining up at the barricades. The more you have, the more you have to protect. Eye contact is everything. Already, the oil field was quieter. Misogyny converts reality. All that love for objects. It sanctifies him. He wore a face that spoke of multiple divorces. She was bitter about her beauty. That’s all in an evening screening. We’re in a definitional war. Publicity beats truth. Art that risks nothing is worth nothing. A negation of the possibility of forgetting. A private fiefdom. A child on whom childhood was wasted. A game of inches. Ask a pundit or professor. There are only so many laughs to be had.
Interviews
“They’re Using Megaphones” | An Interview with Wendy Brown
“Losing Any Claim to Moral Leadership” | An Interview with Nikhil Pal Singh
“We Will Not Win on Our Own” | An Interview with Eman Abdelhadi
“Politics Is Conflictual” | An Interview with Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
“All Sticks, No Carrots” | An Interview with Adam Tooze
Dispatches on the New Regime
Unified Purpose and Total Vision | Our New Department of Justice
State of Exception | National Security Governance, Then and Now
A Bureaucratic and Feminine Mind | The Right’s Misogyny Politics
Brutality and Opacity | Birthright Citizenship Under Attack
Agit-Slop | The White House’s Numbing Aesthetic
A Disaster Big Enough | Climate Policy on Life Support
Competing Moral Visions | Two Paths for Pronatalism
Easy to Exploit | Collapsing the Urban-Rural Divide
Collective Political Activity | Reclaiming the First Amendment
Anti-Anti-Rape | On the #MeToo Backlash
God-Like Confidence | Donald Trump’s Cult of Faith
MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW – JULY/AUGUST 2025 PREVIEW

Are we ready to hand AI agents the keys?
We’re starting to give AI agents real autonomy, and we’re not prepared for what could happen next.
Is this the electric grid of the future?
In Nebraska, a publicly owned utility deftly tackles the challenges of delivering on reliability, affordability, and sustainability.
Namibia wants to build the world’s first hydrogen economy
Can the vast and sparsely populated African country translate its renewable power potential into national development?