The Nation Guide to the Nation
VideoNation
Author and Nation senior editor Richard Lingeman unveils his new book--a virtual one-stop shop for liberals across America.
VideoNation
Author and Nation senior editor Richard Lingeman unveils his new book--a virtual one-stop shop for liberals across America.
André Schiffrin : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
Studs Terkel's longtime publisher looks back on the historian's remarkable career.
Remembering our national griot, the bearer of stories of people, ordinary and extraordinary.
Dennis Kucinich : Non-Fiction
He was our Boswell, our Whitman, our Sandburg. He could get people to open up and share their innermost thoughts and dreams.
Robert Sherrill's pathbreaking 1990 exposé of the savings and loan scandal sheds light on John McCain's deregulatory politics--and our current financial crisis.
He was funny, he was thoughtful, he was committed and, in the end, he was a friend, period.
As Obama accepts his party's presidential nomination on the forty-fifth anniversary of King's most famous speech, a historian looks beyond the obvious analogies.
Flawed and flamboyant, the charismatic Jesse Jackson wasn't the perfect candidate, but his idealism led The Nation to endorse his bid for the White House.
While the whole world was watching, this is what Chicago's finest did.
Carey McWilliams : Convention Coverage
It was a rigged convention, and the Chicago police were spoiling for a fight.
Oswald Garrison Villard : Convention Coverage
As they nominated FDR, Democratic conventioneers were more interested in grandstanding against prohibition than facing the nation's economic crisis.
Freda Kirchwey : Convention Coverage
At the National Women's Party convention, party leaders spurned black women who sought to be included in the suffragist agenda.
When Democrats nominated William Jennings Bryan as their presidential candidate, The Nation was skeptical.
Andrew Kopkind & Alexander Cockburn : Convention Coverage
Democrats seek the center--and lose their moorings.
Oswald Garrison Villard : U.S. Economy
A tour of the heartland in the depths of the Great Depression.
How Alexander Hamilton "fell into as difficult a position as a public man has ever known, and extricated himself by means which show how much the conventional standards of morals have changed in America since his time."
Robert Sherrill : Journalists & Journalism
Surveying the life and accomplishments of the "late" William F. Buckley Jr.
"To achieve 'social values more noble than mere monetary profit,' to 'keep the money changers permanently out of the temple of our civilization'...would be to transform America."
Oswald Garrison Villard : Feminism & Women
"Here is a lost cause no longer lost, but come to triumphant success, and if the pioneers of that cause are looking down upon this scene, there will be rejoicing in heaven on the fourth day of March."
Peter de Mendelssohn : History
Awaiting trial for the Nazi atrocities were "twenty shabby men... a ragged, spiritless, motley crew of second-rate characters": Ribbentrop, Hiss, Göring...
"I went to Russia believing myself a communist, but contact with those who have no doubts has intensified a thousandfold my own doubts...of every creed so firmly held that for its sake men are willing to inflict widespread misery."
Oswald Garrison Villard : Political Parties
On Saturday, June 27, 1924, "men and women suddenly rose up after days of utterly degraded and demoralizing vaudeville performances to declaim with passion about two big subjects."
It was a record day in the history of the Stock Exchange and, coming as a climax to more than three weeks of declining prices, it was most disastrous in hammering down security values.
George Slaff : Racism & Discrimination
Black people in the state were "regularly and systematically" denied the vote by "intimidation, harassment, economic reprisal, property damage, terrorization, violence and illegal and unconstitutional registration procedures."

