In April 2014, Eric Levenson looked back on the games that popularized handheld gaming.
The year you were born, Bernard Lewis wrote about the origins of the resentment felt by some Muslims toward the West.
In November 1961, The Atlantic published the accounts of Germans who crossed from East to West before the Berlin Wall was erected.
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The conflicts and displacements touched off around the world by the attacks have been reverberating for the majority of your life. “This ‘war’ [on terrorism] will never be over,” wrote James Fallows, a few years after the towers fell.
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Agent Cody Banks was released in 2003.
In January 2013, Rebecca Greenfield wrote that the future of the iTunes Store lies not in music, but in apps.
In February 2014, Matthew O'Brien wrote about how high oil prices blinded the Fed to the upcoming crash.
Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
When 26-year-old Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire, he ignited a tinderbox of protests that continue to roil the Middle East, and kindled the beginnings of democracy in Tunisia.
LM Otero / AP
In February 2014, Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote that the NFL will need to adjust to openly gay players now.
In February 2012, Charles A. Kupchan wrote about the world's emerging economies, and how the world will look by 2050.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: