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The Baffler No. 25

The Baffler No. 25

Thomas Frank
2/5 ( ratings)
Hello, friends. “The None and the Many,” our silver jubilee issue, starts off with a proverbial bang with “Pistols for Two,” an exchange between David Graeber and Thomas Piketty on capital, debt, and the future. Thomas Frank looks the Masons and Rotarians in the eye, and Natasha Vargas-Cooper considers the meaning of a president’s posterior. Nicholson Baker provides us with a meta-review of more than a dozen JFK-assassination books, and emerges from all his reading with his own arresting theory intact. Jacob Silverman travels back in time to visit some like-minded subversives from the cusp of the Information Revolution, and Jason Linkins does us the favor of immersing himself in countless hours of cable TV news, so we don’t have to, thank heavens. Tom Gogola reports from Baton Rouge, Louisiana’s segregation movement, and Astra Taylor from a worker-owned manufacturing plant in Chicago, while Helaine Olen sends updates from Venice, California’s “coolest block in America,” and Daniel Brook experiences the gospel of wealth from the perspective of the direst slums of India.

There are also salvos on politics, economics, and education policy from the formidable brains of Todd VanDerWerff, Chris Bray, Chris Lehmann, Lee Fang, and Jennifer C. Berkshire. Plus excerpts, interviews, and archival treats from Barbara Ehrenreich, Matt Roth, and Hugh McGraw; fiction by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya and Melina Kamerić; and poetry by Peter Payack, Edwin Frank, Joshua Moses, Melissa Monroe, and Elise Partridge. Wait, that’s not all: there are full-color photographs and original illustrations by Michael Northrup, Lewis Koch, Henrik Drescher, Katherine Streeter, and more. Finally, we pay tribute to the dear, departed, and prolific genius that was Baffler artist David McLimans. It’s our friendship issue, believe it or not, and we invite you to join us.

Contents:

Isolatoes

Friends in Low Places
John Summers

Veiled Pensioners of the Mystic Sofa
Thomas Frank

Brown Noser
Natasha Vargas-Cooper

Zapped by the Invisible World
Barbara Ehrenreich

Dreams Incorporated: Living the delayed life with Amway
Matt Roth

Earth Liberation Stunt
Hugh McGraw

Photo Graphic

Sizing Up
Michael Northrup

Politics by Other Memes

World Processor
Jacob Silverman

Noise from Nowhere: The cable news jihad against human intelligence
Jason Linkins

Tip and Gip Sip and Quip: The politics of never
Chris Bray

The None and the Many

Dallas Killers Club: How JFK got shot
Nicholson Baker

Looks Like a Duck, Quacks Like Reality TV
Todd VanDerWerff

The Jim Crow Soft-Shoe Segregationists of St.
Language
English
Pages
295
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
MIT Press
Release
June 17, 2014

The Baffler No. 25

Thomas Frank
2/5 ( ratings)
Hello, friends. “The None and the Many,” our silver jubilee issue, starts off with a proverbial bang with “Pistols for Two,” an exchange between David Graeber and Thomas Piketty on capital, debt, and the future. Thomas Frank looks the Masons and Rotarians in the eye, and Natasha Vargas-Cooper considers the meaning of a president’s posterior. Nicholson Baker provides us with a meta-review of more than a dozen JFK-assassination books, and emerges from all his reading with his own arresting theory intact. Jacob Silverman travels back in time to visit some like-minded subversives from the cusp of the Information Revolution, and Jason Linkins does us the favor of immersing himself in countless hours of cable TV news, so we don’t have to, thank heavens. Tom Gogola reports from Baton Rouge, Louisiana’s segregation movement, and Astra Taylor from a worker-owned manufacturing plant in Chicago, while Helaine Olen sends updates from Venice, California’s “coolest block in America,” and Daniel Brook experiences the gospel of wealth from the perspective of the direst slums of India.

There are also salvos on politics, economics, and education policy from the formidable brains of Todd VanDerWerff, Chris Bray, Chris Lehmann, Lee Fang, and Jennifer C. Berkshire. Plus excerpts, interviews, and archival treats from Barbara Ehrenreich, Matt Roth, and Hugh McGraw; fiction by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya and Melina Kamerić; and poetry by Peter Payack, Edwin Frank, Joshua Moses, Melissa Monroe, and Elise Partridge. Wait, that’s not all: there are full-color photographs and original illustrations by Michael Northrup, Lewis Koch, Henrik Drescher, Katherine Streeter, and more. Finally, we pay tribute to the dear, departed, and prolific genius that was Baffler artist David McLimans. It’s our friendship issue, believe it or not, and we invite you to join us.

Contents:

Isolatoes

Friends in Low Places
John Summers

Veiled Pensioners of the Mystic Sofa
Thomas Frank

Brown Noser
Natasha Vargas-Cooper

Zapped by the Invisible World
Barbara Ehrenreich

Dreams Incorporated: Living the delayed life with Amway
Matt Roth

Earth Liberation Stunt
Hugh McGraw

Photo Graphic

Sizing Up
Michael Northrup

Politics by Other Memes

World Processor
Jacob Silverman

Noise from Nowhere: The cable news jihad against human intelligence
Jason Linkins

Tip and Gip Sip and Quip: The politics of never
Chris Bray

The None and the Many

Dallas Killers Club: How JFK got shot
Nicholson Baker

Looks Like a Duck, Quacks Like Reality TV
Todd VanDerWerff

The Jim Crow Soft-Shoe Segregationists of St.
Language
English
Pages
295
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
MIT Press
Release
June 17, 2014

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