"Defeat in Victory" -- The Atlantic Monthly, December 2000
A review of Crucible of War, by Fred Anderson.
Politics & Prose: Be Afraid -- April 2000
If the digital revolution produces the dystopian nightmare envisioned in the April issue of Wired, humanity's only hope may be the end of capitalism as we know it. Try selling that in an election year.
Politics & Prose: The Billionaire's Curse -- September 1999
Jack Beatty reviews Michael Lewis's The New New Thing -- a profile of Jim Clark, the malcontented founder of Netscape and Silicon Graphics.
Politics & Prose: Most Valuable Player -- July 1999
A look at Michael Jordan and the New Global Capitalism, a new book examining the economic impact of his Airness.
Politics & Prose: All the Presidents' Man -- June 1999
Jack Beatty reviews Name Dropping, the new book by John Kenneth Galbraith, and recalls the days when liberals were cool. Seriously.
Politics & Prose: Slaves' Wages -- May 1999
What price can be put on the exorbitant theft of labor that was American slavery? A look at a new work of history that suggests an answer.
Politics & Prose: How Big Business Got a Soul -- March 1999
Early in this century, advertising and public relations helped give corporate monoliths a new image, shaping public opinion in the process. A look at a new history of how it happened.
Against Inequality -- The Atlantic Monthly, April 1999
A valiant proposal to give every American twenty-one-year-old the same chance to prosper (or fail).
Politics & Prose: What Work Costs Us -- February 1999
Richard Sennett's The Corrosion of Character, a book that examines the demoralizing effects of the new "flexible" economy.
Politics & Prose: Unsparing Witness -- December 1998
Most of us know that transgressions like Thomas Jefferson's were common. But few are aware that the topic of sex and slavery was treated openly and
unflinchingly in the nineteenth century by an Englishwoman named Harriet
Martineau.
Politics & Prose: Newt's Last Stand -- November 1998 Christopher Caldwell, the author of last June's "The Southern Captivity of the GOP," on why Newt Gingrich couldn't save his party from its paralysis. Plus, Jack Beatty offers "A Modest Proposal" to Republicans in search of a unifying issue.
Politics & Prose: The King of Drudge -- February 1998 A look at a new biography of the man behind the assembly line -- whose ideas need to be acknowledged and abandoned.
Politics & Prose: Color Us Green -- January 1998
A heretical new approach to economics puts ecology first -- and may change the way we think about growth.
Politics & Prose: Down With Majority Rule -- September 1997
Imagine an America where the majority does not rule. That may be what's needed to resuscitate our political system.
Politics & Prose: Flight or Fight -- January 1997
Wealthy Americans are evading taxes in unprecedented numbers, and the result
is class warfare -- fought by the rich, not the poor.
Politics & Prose: Victories without Victors -- December 1996
At the end of a century of liberal triumphs, nobody wants to take the credit.
A musing on the curious transformation of the term "liberal" -- from a
description to an accusation.
Comment: The End of Serious Public
Policy -- September 1996 Jack Beatty finds the Democrats at their convention
guilty of "laychrymose exploitation." Where was the substance? he asks.
Comment: Platform? What
Platform? -- August 1996
Something was missing from the second week of the GOP convention. Jack
Beatty marvels at how quickly the first week's proceedings were forgotten.
The Year of
Talking Radically -- The Atlantic Monthly, June 1996 For the first time since the New Deal, ordinary Americans are asking what our economy is for.
What Election '96
Should Be About -- The Atlantic Monthly, May 1996 Fat and Mean: The Corporate Squeeze of Working Americans and the Myth of
Managerial "Downsizing," by David M. Gordon.
Wages Matter Most -- The Atlantic Monthly, March 1996 They Only Look Dead: Why Progressives Will Dominate the Next
Political Era by E.J. Dionne Jr.
The Transatlantic Look -- The Atlantic Monthly, December 1995
A visit with the designer Joseph Abboud.
From Out of the South -- The Atlantic Monthly, November 1995 All God's Children: The Bosket Family and the American Tradition of Violence, by
Fox Butterfield.
The Road to a Third
Party -- The Atlantic Monthly, August 1995
The golden rule of political analysis is that in order "to discover who
rules" you must "follow the gold (i.e., trace the origins and financing of
the campaign . . .).
Who Speaks for the
Middle Class? -- The Atlantic Monthly, May 1994
Whatever their rhetoric may be, as a practical matter the Democrats think
first of the less fortunate, the Republicans of the well-to-do. Meanwhile,
the nation-breaking crisis of the middle class continues.
The Exorbitant
Anachronism -- The Atlantic Monthly, June 1989
A conceptual guide to the major East-West issue for the rest of the
century--how to cut the price of a military standoff that costs the two sides
$600 billion a year to sustain.