This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.
In today’s reading list, our editors have compiled stories about new and promising medical developments, including breakthroughs to treat lupus, a possible birth-control revolution, and a food-allergy fix that’s been hiding in plain sight.
Your Reading List
A ‘Crazy’ Idea for Treating Autoimmune Diseases Might Actually Work
Lupus has long been considered incurable—but a series of breakthroughs are fueling hope.
By Sarah Zhang
The Coming Birth-Control Revolution
An abundance of new methods for men could transform women’s contraception too.
By Katherine J. Wu
Why People Itch, and How to Stop It
Scientists are discovering lots of little itch switches.
By Annie Lowrey
A Food-Allergy Fix Hiding in Plain Sight
Why did it take so long to reach patients?
By Sarah Zhang
Bats Could Hold the Secret to Better, Longer Human Life
A team of researchers dreams of anti-aging, disease-tempering drugs—all inspired by bats.
By Katherine J. Wu
A Fix for Antibiotic Resistance Could Be Hiding in the Past
Phage therapy was once used to treat bubonic plague. Now it could help inform a new health crisis.
By Patience Asanga
The Cystic-Fibrosis Breakthrough That Changed Everything
The disease once guaranteed an early death—but a new treatment has given many patients a chance to live decades longer than expected. What do they do now?
By Sarah Zhang
The Week Ahead
- Red One, an action film starring Chris Evans and Dwayne Johnson as members of an elite team tasked with saving Santa Claus (in theaters Friday)
- Season 6 of Cobra Kai, the final season about Johnny Lawrence, who reopens the Cobra Kai dojo, and his rivalry with Daniel LaRusso (part two premieres Friday on Netflix)
- Set My Heart on Fire, a novel by Izumi Suzuki about a young woman who finds a surprising relationship in the club and bar scene of 1970s Tokyo (out Tuesday)
Essay
The Invention That Changed School Forever
By Ian Bogost
Some objects are so familiar and so ordinary that it seems impossible to imagine that they did not always exist. Take the school backpack, for example. Its invention can be traced to one man, Murray McCory, who died last month. McCory founded JanSport in 1967 with his future wife (Jan, the company’s namesake). Until JanSport evolved the design, a backpack was a bulky, specialized thing for hiking, used only by smelly people on mountain trailheads or European gap years. By the time I entered school, the backpack was lightweight and universal. What did anyone ever do previously?
They carried their books. Let me repeat that they carried their books.
Read the full article.
More in Culture
- America got the father it wanted.
- George Packer: “The Magic Mountain saved my life.”
- A precise, cutting portrayal of societal misogyny
- “Dear James”: I love to drive fast, and I cannot stop.
- The freedom of Quincy Jones
Catch Up on The Atlantic
- Why Democrats are losing the culture war
- What can women do now?
- The case for treating Trump like a normal president
- Why Netanyahu fired his defense minister
Photo Album
Take a look at these photos of the week, showing a freestyle motocross exhibition in Italy, Election Day in the U.S., a volcanic eruption in Indonesia, and more.
Explore all of our newsletters.
When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.