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Inside the Rio Grande deportation courts, Jia Tolentino, public art and censorship

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nybooks.com

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Thu, Sep 19, 2019 05:38 PM

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Sponsored by Madeleine Schwartz Los Fresnos, Texas: Port Isabel Detention Center is at the end of a

Sponsored by [Harvard University Press]( [Inside the Deportation Courts]( Madeleine Schwartz Los Fresnos, Texas: Port Isabel Detention Center is at the end of a long road lined with bush and cotton fields in the Rio Grande Valley of southern Texas, ten miles from the Mexican border. Around 1,200 people detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement are held there at any given time. Some were apprehended at the border. Others were arrested after a traffic violation. [Song of My Self-Care]( Jacqueline Rose Jia Tolentino’s Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion Also in our new issue: Ursula Lindsey on the Arab Spring in Egypt, Kathryn Hughes on the Olivier sisters, Gary Saul Morson on Vasily Grossman, Sean Wilentz on the decay of the Republican Party, Helen Epstein on the Inuit suicide crisis, poems by Edward Hirsch and Michael Hofmann, and much more NYR Daily [The Problem with Canceling the Arnautoff Murals]( Michele H. Bogart When concerns about history, censorship, and education come up against demands for respect and social justice [The Green New Deal: A Fight for Our Lives]( Naomi Klein Humanity has a once-in-a-century chance to fix an economic model that is failing the majority of people on multiple fronts. [An Interview with Jacqueline Novak]( Andrea Long Chu Talking with the creator of the off-Broadway show Get on Your Knees You are receiving this message because you signed up for email newsletters from The New York Review. [Update preferences]( The New York Review of Books 435 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014 [Unsubscribe](

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