A TIME TO KILL

Before Lincoln turned the idea of "the Union" into a cause worth dying for, he tried other means of ending slavery.
Out of guilt or amnesia, we tend to treat wars, in retrospect, as natural disasters: terrible but somehow inevitable, beyond anyone's control. Shaking your fist at the fools who started the First World War and condemned millions to a meaningless death seems jejune; historians teach us to say that the generals did their best under impossible conditions. Mournful fatalism is the requisite emotion, even when mad fury would be more apt. Efforts at de-escalation are cast as weakness or cowardice, while those who lead nations into catastrophe are praised for their “strength of character,” or for stoically accepting what was supposedly unavoidable. We rarely honor those who turn back at the brink. John F. Kennedy’s compromise during the Cuban missile crisis is an exception, though only because prudence and caution—our removal of nuclear missiles from Turkey—were neatly covered up and presented as pugnacity and courage: we had made the Russians “blink.”
The habit of describing war with metaphors drawn from natural disasters is as old as war writing. Homer himself uses natural metaphors to ennoble violent human actors: Achilles is a wildfire sweeping across the Trojan plain. Given what Greek warfare actually entailed—pitched battles of close combat, where victory meant cutting others to death with edged weapons—the figure feels less like a metaphor than a mask.
Dit verhaal komt uit de April 28, 2025 editie van The New Yorker.
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Dit verhaal komt uit de April 28, 2025 editie van The New Yorker.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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ELIAS
Fiction
LETTER FROM FRANCE: SCHMEAR CAMPAIGN
Is a European conspiracy behind a ban on a virally popular hazelnut spread?
FIRST THINGS FIRST DEPT.ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
At four o'clock on a recent Friday, Kevin McCullough found himself staring at a line of text on a poster in the Graham Avenue subway station, in Williamsburg.

CONTINUING EDUCATION DEPT.TUSKS UP
In early May, the N.H.L.’s newest team, a year-old Salt Lake City-based franchise provisionally known as the Utah Hockey Club, unveiled its official name and mascot, after considering such options as Black Diamonds, Blast, Blizzard, Canyons, Caribou, Freeze, Frost, Fury, Glaciers, Hive, Ice, Mountaineers, Outlaws, Powder, Squall, Swarm, Venom, and Yeti. Behold: the Utah Mammoth.

AN UPDATE ON OUR FAMILY
First, a sincere thanks to the friends, neighbors, and homeowners' association representatives who have reached out during the past four months. We've heard from so many of you—a couple of times via a note tied to a rock thrown through our window—as we've navigated this journey.

STILL LIFE
The “forever business” of Green-Wood Cemetery.

THE HEAT OF THE MOMENT
To stop violent crime, we need to grasp what really drives it.

BROTHERS OF THE CLOTH
The Met's take on Black male style.

AWAKENINGS
Whatever happened to Margaret Fuller?

ANNALS OF AVIATION - TURBULENCE
Amelia Earhart’ husband pushed her to keep tempting fate for the sake of fame.