Animals-and-Pets

The Atlantic
The Women Who Changed Spycraft
An old-boy operation was transformed during World War II, and at last the unsung upstarts are getting their due.
10 min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
Ethiopia's Image-Maker
Aïda Muluneh, whose vibrant photographs explore national identity, wants to upend portrayals of Africa.
8 min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
Autocorrect
How advances in real-time fact-checking might improve our politics
10+ min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
Eat Food. All The Time. Mostly Junk.
How the “food revolution” turned us into snackers, guaranteeing the demise of healthy home cooking
9 min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
Liberalism's Last Stand
As Viktor Orbán systematically removed all impediments to his autocratic regime, one independent institution stood defiant: a university, in the heart of Budapest, founded by George Soros. The school’s survival became a test of liberalism’s ability to beat back its new ideological foe—in Hungary and beyond.
10+ min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
To Save The Church, Dismantle The Priesthood
Catholics must detach themselves from the clerical hierarchy— and take the faith back into their own hands.
10+ min |
June 2019

The Atlantic
Don't Worry, It's Just a Phase
Imagine a world without the concept of adolescence.
2 min |
May 2018

The Atlantic
Unicorn Fever
The mythical creature rises in uncertain times.
2 min |
May 2018

The Atlantic
Will Disney Kill Off The Movie Theater?
In its quest to beat Netix, it might have to.
9 min |
May 2018

The Atlantic
What Alexa Taught My Father
Legally blind since age 18, he missed out on the rst digital revolution.
6 min |
May 2018

The Atlantic
Mrs. Maisel's Secret
Amazon’s hit show is a fantasy of a woman living in two contradictory worlds at once.
6 min |
May 2018

The Atlantic
Iron Chefs
How automation is transforming the restaurant industry.
8 min |
January/February 2018
The Atlantic
The White House Mythmaker
How Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’s heroic vision of American presidents led him, and the country, astray
10+ min |
November 2017

The Atlantic
Why Are We So Angry?
The untold story of how we all got so mad at one another
10+ min |
January/February 2019
The Atlantic
What Really Killed The Dinosaurs?
A Princeton geologist has endured decades of ridicule for arguing that the fifth extinction was caused not by an asteroid but by a series of colossal volcanic eruptions. Her fight with the asteroid camp may be the nastiest feud in all of science— but she’s reopened a debate that had been considered closed.
10+ min |
September 2018
The Atlantic
Thanks For The Memories?
For the past 13 years, I’ve given Facebook my photos, my videos, my likes, and untold hours of my time. Sifting through the detritus was amusing and surprising—and weirdly sad.
7 min |
September 2018
The Atlantic
The Minister Of Self-Defense
John Correia, the most popular gun educator on YouTube, wants you to prepare for the worst day of your life.
9 min |
September 2018
The Atlantic
The Secrets In Your Inbox
Employee emails contain valuable insights into company morale—and might even serve as an early-warning system for uncovering malfeasance. Bosses are taking an interest.
8 min |
September 2018
The Atlantic
The Lie Of Little Women
Subversive secrets lurk in the gap between Louisa May Alcott’s real life and the story she tells.
9 min |
September 2018

The Atlantic
These Are The People In Your Neighborhood
Nextdoor, a hyperlocal social-media platform, highlights petty grievances—and proves that Americans have more in common than they think.
6 min |
July/August 2018

The Atlantic
Sam Shepard Saw It All Coming
The family battles he described foreshadowed our current national crisis.
9 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
The Stock-Buy Back Swindle
American corporations are spending trillions of dollars to repurchase their own stock. The practice is enriching CEOs—at the expense of everyone else.
7 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
Why The Police Fail To Catch Serial Rapists?
What new research reveals about sexual predators, and why police fail to catch them.
10+ min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
How Walking Became Pedestrian
Glorified for its creative benefits, the pastime has become yet another goal-driven pursuit.
8 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
The Original Huckster
P.T. Barnum taught us to love spectacle, fake news, and a good hoax. A century and a half later, the show has escaped the tent.
5 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
Wait A Minute!
Instantaneous communication can be destructive.We need to tweak our digital platforms to make time for extra eyes, cooler heads, and second thoughts.
6 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
The Metamorphosis
AI will bring many wonders. It may also destabilize everything from nuclear détente to human friendships. We need to think much harder about how to adapt.
9 min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
Raj Chetty's American Dream
The economist whose work dispelled the myth of social mobility in the U.S. Has a plan to make it a reality.
10+ min |
August 2019

The Atlantic
The Crisis In Democracy
The national constitution center, in Philadelphia, is a monument to the benefits of pessimism. The center, which is situated across an open expanse from Independence Hall, is a superior educational institution, but, understood correctly, it is also a warning about the fragility of the American experiment.
6 min |
October 2018

The Atlantic
The Brutal Truth About Climate Change
William T.Vollmanns latest opus is one of the most honest and fatalisticbooks about global warming yet written.
9 min |