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  • News section icon
    Seven Jews Who Should Win the Nobel Prize in Literature This Week (But Probably Won’t)

    Forget Roth, Oz, or Grossman. Here are the real stars.

    byLiel Leibovitz
  • News section icon
    Not Just Analog. IRL.

    Join us on Monday Sept. 19 for a celebration of the first year of our print magazine

    byAlana Newhouse
  • Arts & Letters section icon
    The Incurable World of Vivian Gornick

    ‘The Odd Woman and the City’ proves the memoirist is a peer of Kazin, Howe, and other great chroniclers of Jewish America

    byAdam Kirsch
  • News section icon
    Nextbook Press Titles Honored

    2011 National Jewish Book Awards announced

    byMarc Tracy
  • (La caverne aux livres by gadl / Alexandre Duret-Lutz; some rights reserved.)
    (La caverne aux livres by gadl / Alexandre Duret-Lutz; some rights reserved.)
    Arts & Letters section icon
    On the Bookshelf

    Jews have always been keen on joining revolutions. Some revolutionaries, like Emma Goldman, sought to change the minds of workers; others, like Richard Feynman, looked to change our understanding of matter.

    byJosh Lambert
  • Rosa Luxemburg.(Wikimedia Commons)
    Rosa Luxemburg.(Wikimedia Commons)
    Community section icon
    Dissenter

    Rosa Luxemburg was a Marxist activist in early 20th-century Berlin, murdered by her political enemies after World War I. She’s the topic of the debut edition of “Long Story Short,” a new podcast on people and ideas in Jewish life.

    byLong Story Short
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