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Margaret Talbot head shot - The New Yorker

Margaret Talbot

Margaret Talbot joined The New Yorker as a staff writer in 2004, writing Profiles in addition to dispatches and commentary on legal issues, cultural history, social movements, and indie music. She has written about a villa in Austria where a doctor performed experiments on children; the photographer Jocelyn Lee’s nude portraits of older women; the myth of whiteness in classical sculpture; and the singer Kate Bush. Previously, she was a contributing writer at the New York Times Magazine and, from 1995 to 1999, the executive editor of The New Republic. She was one of the founding editors of Lingua Franca and was a senior fellow at New America. In 1999, she received a Whiting Award.

Talbot is the author of “The Entertainer: Movies, Magic and My Father’s Twentieth Century,” a history of twentieth-century entertainment told through the adventures of her actor father, Lyle Talbot. She also wrote, with her brother David Talbot, “By the Light of Burning Dreams: The Triumphs and Tragedies of the Second American Revolution,” about left-wing activism in the nineteen-sixties and seventies. A native of Los Angeles, she now lives in Washington, D.C.

Denmark Is Sick of Being Bullied by Trump

The U.S., once Denmark’s closest ally, is threatening to steal Greenland and attacking the country’s wind-power industry. Is this a permanent breakup?

The Mystery of the Political Assassin

Even in cases like Luigi Mangione’s, the intentions of assassins are dwarfed by the meanings we project onto them.

Joachim Trier Has Put Oslo on the Cinematic Map

His new film, “Sentimental Value,” is another intimate character study set in the Norwegian capital. His approach to directing is as empathic as his films.

What’s Life Like in Washington, D.C., During Trump’s Takeover?

Late-summer days and nights amid troops on the streets of the nation’s capital.

Trump Sends in the National Guard

Is the President’s takeover of D.C. a dry run for other cities?

The First Time America Went Beard Crazy

A sweeping new history explores facial hair as a proving ground for notions about gender, race, and rebellion.

Remembrance of Scents Past

At museums, curators are incorporating smells that can transport visitors to a different time.

What We’re Reading This Summer: Mega-Reads

New Yorker writers on long, immersive books that are worth the plunge.

Does a Fetus Have Constitutional Rights?

After Dobbs, fetal personhood has become the anti-abortion movement’s new objective.

Elon Musk Also Has a Problem with Wikipedia

Lately, Musk’s beef has merged with a general conviction on the right that the site is biased against conservatives.

Is Contraception Under Attack?

You can now buy a pill over the counter, but a conservative backlash is promoting anti-contraceptive disinformation.

What Can We Learn from the Historical Fight for Birth Control?

From the daily newsletter: Margaret Talbot on the modern relevance of early contraception activism. Plus: reporting from Lebanon; Sarah Moss’s memoir of disordered eating; and the diligence of Frank Auerbach.

The Frenemies Who Fought to Bring Birth Control to the U.S.

Though Margaret Sanger and Mary Ware Dennett shared a mission, they took very different approaches. Their ensuing rivalry was political, sometimes even personal.

How a Mid-Century Paramour Became a Democratic Power Broker

Churchill weaponized her powers of seduction—but Pamela Harriman came into her own when she brought her glamour to Washington.

J. D. Vance and the Right’s Call to Have More Babies

Pronatalism has much in common with some of Vance’s views: it typically combines concerns about falling birth rates with anti-immigration and anti-feminist ideas.

The Original Bluestockings Were Fiercer Than You Imagined

In eighteenth-century England, a cohort of intellectual women braved vicious mockery. But when it came to policing propriety, they could dish it out, too.

Donald Trump’s Abortion Problem at the Polls

Since Roe v. Wade was overturned, G.O.P. efforts to ban abortion have backfired with voters in many states—and they could do so again in November.

How Candida Royalle Set Out to Reinvent Porn

As a feminist in the adult-film industry, she believed the answer wasn’t banning porn; it was better porn.

A Begrudgingly Affectionate Portrait of the American Mall

“We’re all being manipulated in the mall,” the photographer Stephen DiRado says. But his photos elicit a certain nostalgia, almost in spite of themselves.

When America First Dropped Acid

Well before the hippies arrived, LSD and other hallucinogens were poised to enter the American mainstream.