In March 2015, Irvin Weathersby Jr. wrote about what hip-hop can teach Americans.
In April 2000, David Rieff wrote about the fraught history and sad—but safe—modern condition of the formerly Yugoslavian city of Sarajevo.
The year you were born, Mary Jo Salter wrote about how the potential for women to be drafted into the military made society think more deeply about both war and feminism.
Patrick Hertzog / AFP / Getty Images
“It was thought that all borders between men had similarly disintegrated, and we were all destined to be free and empowered individuals in a global meeting place,” wrote Robert Kaplan 20 years later.
Everett Collection
Dazed and Confused was released in 1993.
In June 2006, Charles C. Mann wrote about traveling in Japan.
In the July/August 2008 issue, Nicholas Carr wondered whether Google was making people stupid.
Kim Kyung-Hoon / Reuters
In December 2016, David Sims reviewed the film La La Land, starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone.
Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
People across the world rediscovered the power and peril of revolutions, as Laura Kasinof found in Yemen.
In December 2015, Robinson Meyer wrote about why scientists had accepted this fact.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: