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Nan Levinson

Nan Levinson’s most recent book is War Is Not a Game: The New Antiwar Soldiers and the Movement They Built. A TomDispatch regular, she teaches journalism and fiction writing at Tufts University.

The Far Right in Uniform

How Extreme Is the U.S. Military?

By Nan Levinson On April 6, 2021On April 6, 2021

Veterans Go to Washington

So What?

By Nan Levinson On July 12, 2020On July 22, 2020

Would a Draft Matter?

The Nature of the Military That Fights America’s Forever Wars

By Nan Levinson On March 10, 2020On March 10, 2020

The Big Dick School of American Patriotism

And What We Make of It

By Nan Levinson On March 17, 2015On March 17, 2015

Mad, Bad, Sad

By Nan Levinson On June 28, 2012On June 28, 2012

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Recent Articles

  • Back to the Future at the Pentagon April 8, 2021
  • The Far Right in Uniform April 6, 2021
  • “The Greatest Purveyor of Violence in the World” April 4, 2021
  • Stumbling into War? April 1, 2021
  • Will Biden’s Central American Plan Slow Migration (or Speed It Up)? March 30, 2021

Recent Books

  • Splinterlands

    Julian West, looking backwards from 2050, tries to understand why the world and his family have fallen apart. Part Field Notes from a Catastrophe, part 1984, part World War Z, John Feffer’s striking new dystopian novel, takes us deep into the battered, shattered world of 2050. The European Union has broken apart. Multiethnic great powers like Russia and… Read more

  • Frostlands

    It’s 2051, and Arcadia is under attack. As the stand-alone sequel to Splinterlands begins, the sustainable compound in what was once Vermont is on high alert. Arcadia’s defense corps is mobilized to defend against what first appears to be a routine assault, one of the many that the community must repulse from para- military forces… Read more

  • A Nation Unmade by War

    A Nation Unmade by War surveys American exceptionalism in the age of absurdity. As Tom Engelhardt argues, despite having a more massive, technologically advanced, and better-funded military than any other power on the planet, in the last decade and a half of constant war across the Greater Middle East and parts of Africa, the United… Read more

  • In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power

    In a completely original analysis, prize-winning historian Alfred W. McCoy explores America’s rise as a world power—from the 1890s through the Cold War—and its bid to extend its hegemony deep into the twenty-first century through a fusion of cyberwar, space warfare, trade pacts, and military alliances. McCoy then analyzes the marquee instruments of US hegemony—covert… Read more

  • Every Body Has a Story

    As the Great Recession and the foreclosure crisis hit, four close friends who barely made it out of poverty in New York City’s South Bronx, suddenly find themselves caught up in the economic maelstrom. Lena, Zack, Dory, and Stu must reconcile their troubled past with an uncertain future in Beverly Gologorsky’s stunning new novel, a… Read more

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