"CULTURE & COMMERCE" COLUMNS, THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
The Gift-Card Economy
For some people, spending just doesn't come naturally--especially in a recession. Behavioral economists have a solution.
May 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.
April 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?
March 2009
Online sidebar:
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.
Pop Psychology
Why asset bubbles are a part of the human condition that regulation can't cure.
December 2008
The Case for Debt
Public anxiety over "excessive" consumer debt has a long, and misguided, history.
November 2008
The Politics of the Retouched Headshot (online feature)
In an image-savvy culture, we're increasingly forced to consider just what constitutes a valid portrait.
October 16, 2008
Inconspicuous Consumption
A new theory of the leisure class
July/August 2008
The Art of Healing
How better aesthetics in hospitals can make for happier--and healthier--patients
April 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.
January/February 2008
Online sidebar:
What's in a Font? An Interview with Gary Hustwit
Rightsize Me
Why sending a man to the moon is easier than finding jeans that fit
December 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.
November 2007
Beautiful Minds
On television shows like CSI and Numb3rs, scientists are still weird—but a geeky glamour has replaced the old stereotypes.
September 2007
Starlight and Shadow
George Hurrell's brilliantly orchestrated photographs helped define Hollywood glamour in the 1930s.
July/August 2007
Paint of View
The color of a house is a sign of owner individuality—and a test of neighborhood tolerance.
June 2007
Online sidebar:
Storybook Ending
How an enterprising first-time publisher gave the beloved children's book Mr. Pine's Purple House a second life
Dress Sense
Why fashion deserves its place in art museums
May 2007
Lofty Ambitions
Once upon a time, lofts were cheap spaces for struggling artists. Today they are phony and pricey, and that's just fine.
April 2007
The Truth About Beauty
It is the same in the eye of every beholder.
March 2007
Up, Up, and Away
Today, air travel is just another form of mass transit. Is there any going back to the glamorous days of yore?
January/February 2007
In Praise of Chain Stores
They aren't destroying local flavor--they're providing variety and comfort
December 2006
The Iconographer
In Julius Shulman's photographs, modern architecture became seductive, comfortable, and immortal
November 2006
Superhero Worship
Once the province of Garbo and Astaire, movie glamour now comes from Superman, Spider-Man, and Storm.
October 2006
Signs of Our Times
In under a century, neon signs--part sculpture, part lighting, part billboard--have gone from marketing tool to tacky trash to folk art.
September 2006
The Next Starbucks?
How massage went from the strip club to the strip mall
July/August 2006
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