EditorialMichael Eduardo de Aponte Fonseca, who survived a car plowing into a group of migrants in Brownsville, Texas, sits on a picnic bench in the city on Sunday, May 7, 2023. (Verónica G. Cárdenas/The New York Times)
EditorialMichael Eduardo de Aponte Fonseca, who survived a car plowing into a group of migrants in Brownsville, Texas, sits on a picnic bench in the city on Sunday, May 7, 2023. (Verónica G. Cárdenas/The New York Times)
EditorialMichael Eduardo de Aponte Fonseca, who survived a car plowing into a group of migrants in Brownsville, Texas, sits on a picnic bench in the city on Sunday, May 7, 2023. (Verónica G. Cárdenas/The New York Times)
EditorialMichael Eduardo de Aponte Fonseca, who survived a car plowing into a group of migrants in Brownsville, Texas, sits on a picnic bench in the city on Sunday, May 7, 2023. (Verónica G. Cárdenas/The New York Times)
EditorialArtist Haena Yoo, who makes intricate sculptures and installations that incorporate organic substances and explore how goods and identity flow and morph across borders at her studio in Seoul, South Korea, Dec. 21, 2022. (Jun Michael Park/The New York Times)
EditorialPolice at the scene where authorities say that Sayfullo Saipov killed eight pedestrians and cyclists, and injured more than a dozen others, by plowing into them with a rented pickup on a West Side bicycle path in Manhattan, Oct. 31, 2017. (Todd Heisler/The New York Times)
EditorialArtist Haena Yoo, who makes intricate sculptures and installations that incorporate organic substances and explore how goods and identity flow and morph across borders at her studio in Seoul, South Korea, Dec. 21, 2022. (Jun Michael Park/The New York Times)
EditorialNative Americans of Paraguay converted by Jesuits shown wearing clothes, plowing the land, spinning yarn, and living in a timber house with a shrine to the Virgin Mary and Jesus. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Migliavacca from Giulio Ferrrario's...