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Virginia Postrel

Virginia Postrel is an Atlantic contributing editor and the editor in chief of deepglamour.net. She is writing a book about glamour. More

Contributing editor for The Atlantic and author of The Substance of Style and The Future and Its Enemies. Editor-in-chief of DeepGlamour.net.
Amazon vs. Apple: What Should E-Book Prices Be?

Amazon vs. Apple: What Should E-Book Prices Be?

How much would you pay for an e-book? Amazon, Apple want to know.… More »

...With Functioning Kidneys for All

Surely we can find enough kidney donors for those who need transplants. But doing so will require creativity, boldness, and a sense of urgency—and experimenting with controversial ideas like donor chains and financial incentives.… More »

Issue May 2009

The Gift-Card Economy

For some people, spending just doesn’t come naturally—especially in a recession. Behavioral economists have a solution… More »

Issue April 2009

Macroegonomics

Economic policy makers thought they had tamed the business cycle. Not quite. Let’s hope their hubris doesn’t get in the way of our economic recovery… More »

Defending “My Drug Problem”

Virginia Postrel’s March article on the availability of cancer drugs sparked enormous reader response, much more than the print magazine’s Letters to the Editor section could accommodate. Here she responds to some common criticisms from those letters.… More »

Issue March 2009

My Drug Problem

The cancer drug Herceptin saved the author’s life. It also cost $60,000. Would health-care reform put it, and other expensive new drugs, out of reach?… More »

TED roundup: production values

If you still think a standard PowerPoint presentation or, worse, a C-Span-style speech from a written text is an acceptable level of public speaking, you obviously haven't been to a recent TED conference. I thought graphic design conferences had high production values, but these 18-minute talks set a new standard for polish and sophistication. (Speakers got advance help with their presentations from Duarte Design.) Fortunately, TED gave all attendees a copy of…… More »

TED roundup: random notes

Bill Gates in response to a question about whether improving health in poor countries will lead to a population explosion: When the Gates Foundation started out, it emphasized "reproductive health," a.k.a. population control. (Someone once noted that you can always convince poor people that rich people have too much money and rich people that poor people have too many children.) But they soon discovered that there's a direct relationship between improving health…… More »

TED roundup: if growth is an anti-poverty program, then depression...

This year's may have been the gloomiest Davos ever, but TED maintained its usual optimism. Even the customary predictions of environmental catastrophe were accompanied by faith in activism and change. On the last day, curator Chris Anderson addressed critics who complained that the conference was ignoring the global economic crisis. His main point was to maintain long-term perspective, arguing--with a Keynes quote--that TED engages the ideas that create a better…… More »

TED roundup: saving the oceans

I spent last week at TED@PalmSprings, the cheaper, more intimate (and, we PSers liked to imagine, cooler) simulcast of the famed TED conference going on in Long Beach. TED is an intense, immersive experience with a hugely varied program: 50 18-minute talks or performances, plus 36 three-minute presentations, in three and a half days--not counting pre-conference tours (I visited a windmill farm) and, at Palm Springs, two mornings of TEDDIY sessions during which…… More »

Issue December 2008

Pop Psychology

Why asset bubbles are a part of the human condition that regulation can’t cure… More »

Issue November 2008

The Case for Debt

Public anxiety over “excessive” consumer debt has a long, and misguided, history. By Virginia Postrel… More »

The Politics of the Retouched Headshot

"In an image-savvy culture, we’re increasingly forced to consider just what constitutes a valid portrait"… More »

Issue July 2008

Inconspicuous Consumption

A new theory of the leisure class… More »

The Peril of Obama

The glamour of Obama may be hard to resist, but could it get the country into trouble if he wins the presidency?… More »

Issue April 2008

The Art of Healing

How better aesthetics in hospitals can make for happier—and healthier—patients… More »

What's in a Font?

Virginia Postrel talks with Gary Hustwit—director of Helvetica—about filmmaking, creativity, and the expressive implications of one of the world's most popular typefaces … More »

Issue January 2008

Playing to Type

A revolution in typeface design has led to everything from more-legible newspapers and cell-phone displays to extra-tacky wedding invitations.… More »

Issue December 2007

Rightsize Me

Why sending a man to the moon is easier than finding jeans that fit… More »

Issue November 2007

A Tale of Two Town Houses

Real estate may be as important as religion in explaining the infamous gap between red and blue states.… More »

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