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Policing Parents: Jessamine Chan’s “The School for Good Mothers” Imagines a Carceral State for “Bad” Moms
In Jessamine Chan’s debut novel, “The School for Good Mothers,” the question of how to punish bad mothers is answered by the state, in an America not much different from our own.
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“Yellowjackets” and the Disturbing Reality of Social Contract
With Yellowjackets, the so-called “puzzle-box show” achieves a kind of maturity by doing away with the conspiratorially furrowed brow of the masculine heroes who are obsessed with, and eventually resolve, whatever metaphysical conundrum that has made life unlivable.
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Rethinking Legacy: "Tastemakers" is a Starting Point for the Problematic History of Recipes and Food Media
The James Beard award winner Mayukh Sen’s first book invites trouble, but more questions come up in the process.
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Whitewashed History: The “Loud” Podcast Amplifies Reggaeton’s Overlooked Black Roots
Ivy Queen’s insightful podcast “Loud” examines reggaeton’s past, present, and future.
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5 Feminist Albums That Got Us Through December
This month we listened to Tierra Whack, Alicia Keys, ZOLA, and more.
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Please, Take the Blue Pill: "The Matrix Resurrections" Review
Down the rabbit hole goes Thomas Anderson and so, therefore, must we, into “The Matrix Resurrections.”
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Web of Cries: “Spider-Man: No Way Home” Opens up the Multiverse to Explore Grief
Spider-Man: No Way Home shows that—no matter what magic or powers you have—grief impacts us all.
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“Harlem” Could’ve Offered Escapism. Instead, its Black Characters Are Woefully Unoriginal
The new show makes confusing choices that deliver woefully unoriginal Black characters.
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Very Online: The Terrifying Scale of the Online Gossip Economy
Our human instinct to discuss—and judge—others is increasingly warped by social platforms.
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