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The New Yorker @NewYorker
In her new film, “Women Talking,” about a fundamentalist community contending with the aftermath of sexual assault, the director Sarah Polley explores the culpability of systems that allow violence against women. https://t.co/0LMSkIukxh — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Last week, voters from both parties in the polarized state of Arizona overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure that will require large anonymous “dark money” political donors to reveal their identities. https://t.co/KIWR47gEO7 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Nearly 400 election deniers ran in the midterms. The highest-profile among them both lost their races and willingly conceded. Does this mean that Donald Trump’s Stop the Steal movement has run out of political steam? Listen here. https://t.co/0Qvjd1i4od — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
During Jair Bolsonaro’s four years in office, the Amazon rain forest has been subjected to shocking rates of illegal mining, burning, and deforestation. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has promised to reverse that. https://t.co/okUMA7C0lo — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Attire for Minions: eight letters. https://t.co/hmicoVv2uA — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A collection of Joan Didion’s possessions—lamps, her famous sunglasses, blank notebooks that carry the charged possibility of her words—will be sold today at an auction house in Hudson, New York. https://t.co/JrSMnv3KE8 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A recent performance of the keyboard player Kristian Bezuidenhout, who specializes in the fortepiano, captured “a sense of music as an evolutionary art,” Alex Ross writes, “reacting to technology in flux and history in motion.” https://t.co/WRXDi6jIKs — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
With his masterpiece, “Things Fall Apart,” Achebe, who was born on this day in 1930, began the literary reclamation of Nigeria’s history from generations of colonial writers. https://t.co/mUpiSVWObI — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In @newyorkerhumor: one woman’s quest to bring back the word “poser.” https://t.co/G7cvlq60k7 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The Times music critic Robert Palmer once wrote that “having John Lennon fall in love with her was the worst thing that could have happened to Yoko Ono’s career as an artist.” How true is that? https://t.co/zG4fajCInS — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Can you identify this fascinating person in six clues or fewer? https://t.co/KLLtmAALHE — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Money is why Mommy spends so much time looking at her computer and talking to her computer and standing in front of her computer and bowing down before her computer.” https://t.co/pofoGQii67 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The short documentary “Holding Moses,” directed by Rivkah Beth Medow, both engages with and resists myths about disability. Watch here. https://t.co/kYO1Mk0ugd — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
As a kid in the 1990s, Ryan Neil discovered bonsai through the original “Karate Kid” films. It became an obsession that would shape his life for decades to come. https://t.co/OVoKLUPhQK — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The filmmaker Maya Deren nearly single-handedly put experimental cinema on the American cultural map. Then, just as quickly, she fell out of that world, never to return in her too-brief lifetime. https://t.co/911n3Mg2A1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The books-within-books conceit of Lucy Ives’s new novel, “Life Is Everywhere,” is twisty and treacherous, @togglecoat writes, “and taken together its many stories read like an encyclopedia whose every entry is at its heart a story of intimate betrayal.” https://t.co/P0FZo1W3bg — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“I was a thought in the shape Of a spring flower Emerging from a blood-soaked earth. How we lived, and lived, and lived And loved our living. We did not want to let it go.” A poem by @JoyHarjo. https://t.co/dtL4OkrlEF — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Physical beauty was always important to the French novelist Collette; in her most famous books, time, and its effect on her characters, is the grand antagonist. https://t.co/GSLfxfoamf — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“How heedless you’d loved them after all, as they’d loved who- ever it was, was you.” A poem by @JoyceCarolOates. https://t.co/V7B9wUhtDv — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Catching up with the subway crushes who got away. https://t.co/81fOEyHauC — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
From 2016: A number of philosophers, futurists, science-fiction writers, and technologists have come to believe that the simulation argument is not just plausible, but inescapable. https://t.co/2pgzantZFh — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s recently republished masterpiece, “Dictee,” uses fractured syntax to evoke the experiences of colonization and displacement. https://t.co/GcN9vu08ZC — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Watching a place you love change is painful.” In @newyorkerhumor, a heartbreaking tale of two hours in New York City. https://t.co/zxL6A757g2 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The meaning of music, Leonard Bernstein once said, is “the way it makes you feel when you hear it.” Lincoln Center’s new concert hall aims to honor Bernstein’s legacy and vision. https://t.co/YYOyRHIuPD — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
How E. Nesbit used her grief, her politics, and her imagination to make a new kind of book for kids. https://t.co/g4boaNuzE5 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
From 2019: Astrology is enjoying a broad cultural acceptance that hasn’t been seen since the 1970s. What makes it so appealing? https://t.co/OMGMM13fDH — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Judd Hirsch didn’t discover acting until he took a speech class in college. “I went, You know something? You can take language and make it more than words. It excited me like crazy.” https://t.co/53oV3vwx0D — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Rhetorical: You’re wearing *that*? Empathetic: That must have been a *very hard* decision. https://t.co/4mJ3CBn1ya — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
For the pyschotherapist Esther Perel, love is “an active engagement with all kinds of feelings—positive ones and primitive ones and loathsome ones. And it’s often surprising how it can kind of ebb and flow.” https://t.co/rdvsX6T5IE — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
On Tuesday night, Donald Trump surprised no one by announcing that he was running for President again. Will the G.O.P. get behind him? https://t.co/zUHrnXMbes — PolitiTweet.org