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Sexual Assault

The New Yorker Radio Hour

Michael Wolff on MAGA’s Revolt Over Jeffrey Epstein

The journalist talks about his interviews with the infamous abuser, and the political fallout from the White House’s attempt to close his case.
Page-Turner

Neige Sinno Doesn’t Believe in Writing as Therapy

The French author’s award-winning memoir, “Sad Tiger,” is a richly literary and starkly shattering account of childhood sexual abuse.
Cultural Comment

The Zambian Sensibility of “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl”

Our art reflects a commitment to the pleasant, a subtlety and delay in how we communicate, and an easygoing acceptance of contradiction.
The Current Cinema

The Resounding Silences of “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl”

In Rungano Nyoni’s drama, a death in a middle-class Zambian family unearths a history of sexual violence.
News Desk

Pete Hegseth’s Secret History

A whistle-blower report and other documents suggest that Trump’s nominee to run the Pentagon was forced out of previous leadership positions for financial mismanagement, sexist behavior, and being repeatedly intoxicated on the job.
Under Review

Rage, Revenge, and Recovery Battle It Out in Virginie Despentes’s #MeToo Novel

“Dear Dickhead” is set in the messy aftermath of a public reckoning, before its characters have achieved any kind of resolution.
Our Local Correspondents

The Donald Trump Doom Loop

Sitting in a courtroom, feet away from the woman he sexually assaulted, the ex-President keeps trying to outrun the consequences of his own bad acts.
A Reporter at Large

Should Hotel Chains Be Held Liable for Human Trafficking?

For decades, franchised hotels have been a common scene of sex-trafficking crimes in the U.S. A new legal strategy is targeting the corporations that collect royalties from them.
The Political Scene Podcast

E. Jean Carroll and Roberta Kaplan on Defamatory Trump

The writer, who was sexually abused and defamed by Donald Trump, fights back against his continued statements, asking for more damages. But can anything stop Trump’s campaign to malign her?
Page-Turner

A Trailblazer of Trauma Studies Asks What Victims Really Want

Judith Herman’s seminal book “Trauma and Recovery” created a template for her field. Three decades later, she’s published a follow-up to explain how survivors’ needs are still misunderstood.
Our Columnists

Revisiting the Brock Turner Case

In the midst of the #MeToo movement, California voters recalled a judge for being lenient on sexual assault. As a new documentary argues, that recall campaign had unintended results.
Letter from Los Angeles

The Harvey Weinstein Trial and the Myth of the Perfect Perpetrator

If Weinstein is acquitted in L.A., it will be tempting to conclude that #MeToo is over. But, even if he is convicted, some may reach the same conclusion.
Letter from Michigan

An Anti-Abortion Activist’s Quest to End the Rape Exception

For Rebecca Kiessling, helping mothers who’ve conceived children through sexual assault is part of a strategy for curtailing reproductive rights.
Cultural Comment

The Frictionless Triumphs of “She Said”

The movie, which dramatizes the New York Times’ reporting on Harvey Weinstein, takes us far from the usual clatter and grime of newspaper dramas.
A Reporter at Large

The Victim Who Became the Accused

After a Black female police officer reported that a white male colleague had taken advantage of her sexually, she found herself on trial.
News Desk

The Censorship Machine Erasing China’s Feminist Movement

This summer, a viral video of a group of women being viciously attacked in a restaurant sparked national outrage. The response has been quashed.
The Sporting Scene

The N.F.L. Is Still Failing to Hold Deshaun Watson Accountable

To the league, infractions that threaten the authority of a coach are one thing. Those that harm women are something else.
Dispatch

The Psychologists Treating Rape Victims in Ukraine

A grassroots effort is offering mental-health care to Ukrainians who’ve faced sexual violence at the hands of the Russian invasion force.
Annals of Justice

Harvey Weinstein’s Last Campaign

How the Hollywood producer lost control of the story during his criminal trial in New York.
On Television

A Crisis of Fanhood and Faith in “We Need to Talk About Cosby”

W. Kamau Bell’s Showtime series, which seeks to convert those who are still in denial about Bill Cosby’s sex crimes, seems motivated by a feeling of guilt that we all inadvertently provided an alibi for a bully who actually despised us.