the intelligencer profile
Mar. 28, 2022
The Cult of Adam Tooze How the impeccably credentialed, improbably charming economic historian supplanted the dirtbag left.
appreciation
Dec. 23, 2021
Joan Didion’s Greatest Two-Word Sentence The power of an ice-cold, unflinching gaze.
A Free Month of BetterHelp Can’t Fix This The real problem with therapy apps is way bigger than Travis Scott’s partnership.
David Graeber’s Possible Worlds The author of Debt and The Dawn of Everything left behind countless admirers and an abiding belief that society could be changed for the better.
The Reluctant Celebrity of Sally Rooney In Beautiful World, Where Are You , fame is the death of intimacy.
The Sound of My Inbox The financial promise of email newsletters has launched countless micropublications that have, in turn, created a new literary genre.
reckoning with a reckoning
May 27, 2021
Eavesdropping on $5,000 Anti-Racist Dinner Parties Two entrepreneurs have built a business dredging up white women’s shame.
mental health
Mar. 29, 2021
The Therapy-App Fantasy An overwhelming demand for professional counseling has spawned slickly marketed companies promising a service they cannot possibly provide.
What Was the Wing? To the extent that it’s remembered, it will be as an artifact of the Trump era.
Who Did J.K. Rowling Become? Deciphering the most beloved, most reviled children’s-book author in history.
reasons to love new york
Dec. 7, 2020
Farewell to My Go-to Ruth Reichl, Rumaan Alam, Jiayang Fan, and more on losing the place where they were a regular.
Avoiding the Trap of the ‘Self-Aware’ Writer Eula Biss charts a new course through familiar terrain.
Sarah Schulman’s Good Conflict The world is consumed by violent fights and hostile disagreements. The author and activist sees a way out of them.
what i learned
June 22, 2020
How Did I Not Know This About You? What we discovered about each other while locked down together.
She Just Wants Her Students To Keep Talking Samantha Elkaim knows she can’t replicate her classroom, but maybe she can still reach the kids.
Just Give In to Alison Roman Now is a great time to accept her culinary authority.
coronavirus
Mar. 13, 2020
A City of Bodies The week we started hoarding beans.
Here’s the Coronavirus Advice a Doctor Gives Her Family From someone who deals with a lot of sick people, and who also loves you very much.
spring 2020 fashion issue
Mar. 3, 2020
Will the Millennial Aesthetic Ever End? Investigating the undying tyranny of terrazzo.
the cut on tuesdays
Dec. 10, 2019
How My Husband Tricked Me Into Caring About the Grateful Dead And other stories of lifelong love … on this week’s Cut podcast.
spring 2019 fashion issue
Feb. 5, 2019
The Pleasure of Sitting Out a Trend Wearing a trend is one kind of pleasure; not wearing but watching it is another. And the prairie dress is plenty to watch.
Our Lady of Immaculate Taste Penny Martin, editor of fashion’s quirkiest indie mag, on nearly a decade of publishing The Gentlewoman .
The Story Starts When She Falls Rachelle Vinberg, the star of Skate Kitchen, gets torn up and famous and torn up again.
In Her New Book Motherhood, Sheila Heti Confronts an Eternal Female Crossroads The writer takes up the problem of whether to have a baby in her engrossing autobiographical novel.
self reflection
Apr. 2, 2018
The ‘Mirror Face’ of 17 New York Women Women, photographed through a two-way mirror, reveal what they desire in themselves.
Maybe Men Will Be Scared for a While But maybe to fear women is to begin seeing them as people.
pop culture
Jan. 10, 2018
Pop Culture’s Great Awokening What happens to culture in an era of identity politics?
The Instagram Poet Outselling Homer Ten to One Meet Rupi Kaur, author of the ubiquitous Milk and Honey.
What Happens When Work Becomes a Nonstop Chat Room Has Slack made the office more productive? More of a snake pit? More like Tinder?
cut cover story
Mar. 7, 2017
election 2016
Nov. 17, 2016
‘Narcissist’ Is the Worst Insult A new book explains the problem with a popular diagnosis.
cut cover story
June 21, 2016
Think Gender Is Performance? You Have Judith Butler to Thank for That. The radical theorist who spawned a gender-queer nation — and became a pop celebrity in the process.
The IUD: Can Birth Control Be Too Good? My increasingly ambivalent relationship to total control over fertility.
self portrait
Sept. 22, 2015
fall preview 2015
Aug. 27, 2015
literary life
Aug. 12, 2015
Why Literary Chauvinists Love David Foster Wallace When did his fans start making women roll their eyes?
I Like This Bitch’s Life: Tamar Adler Why can’t I be a bean-soaking genius of leftovers?
Why Loving Joan Didion Is a Trap As shown by the frenzy over her Céline ads.
Feminism and Family Life With Ellen Willis, Mom Nona Willis Aronowitz has edited a new anthology of her late mother’s work.
becoming a woman
Mar. 20, 2014
I Cannot Lie: I Love Eileen Fisher I want to drape myself in flowing garments made of silk-linen blends.
I Got a Boyfriend on Craigslist Missed Connections Another reason to love New York: You can be socially incompetent and still find a date.
weighty issues
Nov. 15, 2013
Are Anorexia Memoirs Really How-To Manuals? Kelsey Osgood takes on the genre in How to Disappear Completely .
meet the new magazine
Oct. 30, 2013
Adult Mag: Boobs, But From a Female PerspectiveTalking with Sarah Nicole Prickett, editor of a new erotic magazine.
When Will We Stop Talking About ‘Having It All’? Time magazine has the latest contribution to an exasperating genre.
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