May/June 2017
May/June 2017 Table of Contents FEATURES Interview Yuval Harari: of Cyborgs and
May/June 2017 Table of Contents FEATURES Interview Yuval Harari: of Cyborgs and
Alan Alda loves to dig to the root of things. He has no patience for jargon, for flimsy logic, for impenetrable lectures. He wants to know: What is time? How do clocks work? What are the processes that govern the universe?
The backward tale, coupled with having young, inexperienced performers play the roles of older adults, just wasn’t believable to audiences, and the show flopped after 16 performances.
Into the hell of Bosnia entered Susan Sontag. It was July 1993, her second visit, and she was in Sarajevo to direct a production of Waiting for Godot.
At the Passover seder, Jews across the world retell the greatest love story of all time: the story of what happened when God fell in love.
By Uri Regev Jessica Fishman’s skillfully written memoir Chutzpah and High Heels: The Search for Love and Identity in the
The days of shame about living in America are over. But can this diverse group of immigrants hold onto their culture? And is there a chance that they can become a unified political voice?
A reporter visits the Montana resort town where a vicious neo-Nazi campaign is targeting Jews.
Born in Soviet Ukraine, Steven Volynets immigrated to the United States as a child. He turned to literature after several years as a journalist. Moment spoke with him about his new story, his childhood in Russia and his evolution as a writer.
Myanmar has finally emerged from decades of military dictatorship. But its new democratic government has yet to confront the persecution of the country’s Muslim minority.
Sixteen years later, the original “cast members” look back at the famous trial that debunked Holocaust revisionism—and changed their lives.