Latest News: Author Archive

“A passionate homage to forgotten writers who speak to our own times.” — THE DEEP END reviewed in Kirkus Reviews

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full review here.

“Provocative and controversial, as always, and a worthy addition to the literature of plague and pestilence.” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in Kirkus Reviews

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full review here.

“Will this crisis lead to something better or worse?” — CAUTIVOS author Ariel Dorfman interviewed in the Observer

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full interview here.

PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek interviewed by Patrick Bet-David

Monday, May 25th, 2020

“As Workers Face Dangerous Conditions Amid Reopening, We Need Unions & Medicare for All” — THE MONSTER ENTERS author Mike Davis interviewed on Democracy Now!

Monday, May 25th, 2020

“Far from being totally alien to the American way, the sort of socialism Bernie advocates was commonplace where he grew up” — BERNIE’S BROOKLYN excerpt published on ScheerPost

Monday, May 25th, 2020

Read the full excerpt here.

“The Best Books of 2020 (So Far)” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS featured in Elle

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
In this eye-opening anthology about climate change, an impressive cast of contributors including Edwidge Danticat, Mohammed Hanif, and Margaret Atwood reflect on how the grim horror of our current ecological reality is being felt around the world.

See the full list here.

PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek interviewed on Going Underground

Thursday, May 21st, 2020

“Global Cockfights, Viruses, and the Monsters Within” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in CounterPunch

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Read the full review here.

“A global collection of discussions on film and video as an essential medium for conveying the world’s most urgent concerns” — LUCID DREAMING reviewed in Modern Times Review

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Conversations behind the movie camera

Read the full review here.

PANDEMIC! featured in the New York Times

Thursday, May 21st, 2020

Read the full article here.

“Introduction into new communism?” — PANDEMIC! reviewed on N1

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
Read the full review here.

“In Run-Up to Election, Both Parties Blame China and Offer Little” — THE WRONG STORY author Greg Shupak interviewed on By Any Means Necessary

Thursday, May 21st, 2020
In this episode of By Any Means Necessary hosts Sean Blackmon and Jacquie Luqman are joined by Greg Shupak, media studies teacher at the University of Guelph-Humber in Toronto and author of the book, “The Wrong Story: Palestine, Israel and the Media,” to talk about his new article on FAIR, “Corporate Media Setting Stage for New Cold War With China,” the ongoing attempt by the Trump administration to shift the blame for the pandemic to China and the World Health Organization, and where Mitt Romney’s recent op-ed painting China as “uniquely predatory” fits into the centuries-long history of ‘yellow peril’ racism in the US.

Listen to the full interview here.

“Is this the end of productivity?” — AUTOPILOT featured in New York

Monday, May 18th, 2020
Amid the pandemic, workers whose jobs once defined their lives are questioning what it was all for.

Read the full article here.

“How a Pandemic Happens: We Knew This Was Coming” — THE MONSTER ENTERS excerpt published in Lit Hub

Monday, May 18th, 2020
Mike Davis on the Inevitability of Catastrophe

Read the full excerpt here.

“[A] tour de force… Read Mike Davis’ new updated book before the monster rebounds and we spiral down again” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed in CounterPunch

Monday, May 18th, 2020

Monster Capitalism

I read Mike Davis’ tour de force, The Monster Enters (O/R Books), when I was sick and in bed and thought that I might have COVID-19. Originally published in 2005, the book has just been reissued with a new, nifty wham bam introduction that lays the blame for the current pandemic where it rightfully belongs on the doorstep of the noxious nexus that has brought about monstrous slums, industrial farming, corrupt political regimes and the failure of public health services in the U.S. and many other countries in the world.

Read the full review here.

“Relentlessly practices an endangered, if not nearly extinct, species of journalism: dissident anti-imperialist muckraking” — EXILE reviewed on Middle East Eye

Monday, May 18th, 2020

Exile: A tale of Washington’s twisted role in the world

What Fernandez does in this book is so old-fashioned, and has so quietly evaporated from the how-to guide of being a leftist journalist, that it is worth noting. In case after sordid and bloody case, roving from Tegucigalpa to Diyarbakir, Turkey, to Beirut, she insists that the target of critique cannot simply be bad people doing bad things.

People writing on places where the US is responsible for doing bad things ought to convey the US role. It is usually enormous: shipping Blackhawks and Apaches to the Turkish counterinsurgency forces, embargoing infrastructural repair and water purification equipment from a war-devastated Iraq. In reminding us of that role, Fernandez does us all – except for those profiting from such mayhem – a great service, and it there that the book’s central contribution lies.

Read the full review here.

“The Schmidt-Cuomo digital future is a highway to the Matrix” — PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek writes for RT

Monday, May 18th, 2020
The basic functions of New York state could soon be “reimagined” under the alliance of Governor Andrew Cuomo and Big Tech personified. Is this the testing ground for a dystopian “no-touch” future?

Read the full piece here.

“What would Žižek do?” — PANDEMIC! reviewed on Radio 3 Hong Kong Morning Brew

Monday, May 18th, 2020

“We Can’t Lose the Right to Protest in the Age of Coronavirus” — BERNIE’S BROOKLYN author Theodore Hamm writes for Jacobin

Wednesday, May 13th, 2020
Concerns about the spread of coronavirus are legitimate, but the right to public protest must be upheld through the crisis. Unfortunately, New York City mayor Bill de Blasio has done the opposite, eroding our rights to assembly during the pandemic.

Read the full piece here.

THE DEEP END author Jason Boog interviewed on WBAI Arts Express

Wednesday, May 13th, 2020

Listen to the interview here.

“Was the rebellious son of an earl murdered by the mob?” — SURF, SWEAT AND TEARS author Andy Martin writes for the Daily Express

Wednesday, May 13th, 2020

The tragic search for the truth behind gruesome death of lovelorn aristocrat who wanted to rule the waves.

When you get a 3am call it’s usually bad news, even if it’s from Hawaii. Even more so if the caller reverses the charges, as Ted did, back in the 1990s. I thought it must be some emergency, so I accepted the call.

Read the full piece here.

“Will this universal threat give birth to solidarity—or will barbarianism bloom?” — PANDEMIC! reviewed in the Independent

Monday, May 11th, 2020

Read the full review here.

“Rich with the possibilities of the human experience” — LUCID DREAMING reviewed in CounterPunch

Monday, May 11th, 2020

We Are Movie Cameras, Lucidly Dreaming

Filmmaker and curator Pamela Cohn knows all about the medium’s gallant struggle for a cinematic language that is new, immediate, and accessible to the viewer. Originally from Los Angeles, Cohn has travelled the world as an arts journalist, educator, producer and photographer, and has been a consultant on dozens of films. Currently based in Berlin, she has been an expat now for 10 years, traveling throughout Europe and Asia, and Lucid Dreaming: Conversations with 29 Filmmakers is the result of those intersections. Cohn sees her role with this book as a curator at a gallery of interconnected rooms with alternating ideas on one aesthetic; film language is spoken here, human experience is the entry fee.

Cohn says her inspiration for the method applied to the garnering of conversations and their presentation in Lucid Dreaming came as a result of watching Astra Taylor’s film, Examined Life, at the Woodstock Film Festival in 2008. She writes that it “inspired me greatly. The format with which she approached long and in-depth conversations with some of the world’s most renowned philosophers was very much in line with how I wanted to converse with filmmakers.”

Lucid Dreaming begins with a special, bracketed conversation with Barbara Hammer, who succumbed to cancer last year. In Vital Signs, Hammer attempted to capture the essence of her battle with death (“looking it right in the face,” she tells Cohn). She was a legendary New York filmmaker, of whom Cohn says, “she has left behind an oeuvre that is staggering not only in its fecundity, but in the way her legacy as a life-long working artist lives on in hundreds of filmmakers creating work today.” Her themes and cinematic interests are too innumerable to catalogue here, but, in the interview with Cohn, she discussed a book she was working on that broadly addresses her aesthetic focus: “sexuality, film form and structure, the politics of abstraction.” Her life and work are memorialized at her website.

Lucid Dreaming comprises seven dialogical sections: “Antonyms of Beauty”; “Sonic Truth: Visioning with Sound”; “Border Crossings; Power Plays: Disruption”; “Memory & Magic: Inter-dimensionality”; “Notes from the Interior”; and “The Embodied Camera”. There are discussions of technical considerations, visual politics, and the phenomenological components of subjectivity. The filmmakers come from various countries and cultures, and their stories are idiosyncratic, sometimes bizarre, and always rich with the possibilities of the human experience.

Read the full review here.

SURF, SWEAT AND TEARS author Andy Martin interviewed on the Crest podcast

Monday, May 11th, 2020

“‘Radical’ is an overused word. Žižek, however, genuinely challenges deep-seated dogmas of the Western left.” — PANDEMIC! reviewed in the Point

Thursday, May 7th, 2020
What is truly valuable about Žižek’s writing lies in the glimmer of a shift in sensibility, a shift between two different conceptions of political discourse. One involves the articulation of policies, which range from securing the conditions of biological survival to more ambitious projects to improve the quality of our lives. But Žižek also goes beyond this instrumentalism (which need not be conflated with mere technocracy) and asks the more open-ended question of what it means to live well.

Thinkers on the left have been traditionally and justifiably suspicious of such “ethical” concerns, framing them as bourgeois or “liberal” (uttered with the familiar repulsive ring, like a spit). It is therefore another provocation that Žižek defines his kind of communist as a “liberal with a diploma” (reversing Hungarian leader Viktor Orban’s propaganda that liberals are “communists with a diploma”). We earn such a diploma once we have “seriously studied why our liberal values are under threat” and become aware that “only a radical change can save them.”

“Radical” is an overused word. Žižek, however, genuinely challenges deep-seated dogmas of the Western left.

Read the full review here.

“An eerily timely new book” — THE DEEP END featured in the Los Angeles Times

Thursday, May 7th, 2020

85 years ago, FDR saved American writers. Could it ever happen again?
by David Kipen

There is one living writer whose evangelical belief in the lasting lessons of the FWP beggars even my own. Jason Boog, the L.A. correspondent for Publishers Weekly, will soon publish an eerily timely new book, “The Deep End: The Literary Scene in the Great Depression and Today.”

“The American Guides,” he says, “captured all sorts of cultural works that we could have forgotten: dance steps in Harlem, the early efforts of union organizers in Hollywood and the locations of Hooverville tent cities around Manhattan. As we go through our own crisis … I think a FWP in the 21st century could raise up the voices of people most directly affected by this disaster.”

Read the full article here.

“Epidemics are like wars, they can drag on for years” — PANDEMIC! author Slavoj Žižek writes for RT

Wednesday, May 6th, 2020
We should stop thinking that after a peak in the Covid-19 epidemic things will gradually return to normal. The crisis will drag on. But this doesn’t mean the situation is hopeless.

Read the full piece here.

“For the artists—and [for] any of us that work in the creative sector—it is always a precarious existence” — LUCID DREAMING author Pamela Cohn interviewed on Instanbulberlin

Wednesday, May 6th, 2020

Read the full interview here.

“Michael J. Thompson and Gregory R. Smulewicz-Zucker on democratic socialism” — AN INHERITANCE FOR OUR TIMES editors interviewed on Leonard Lopate at Large

Wednesday, May 6th, 2020

Leonard Lopate at Large on WBAI Radio in New York · Michael J. Thompson and Gregory R. Smulewicz-Zucker on democratic socialism (5/4/20)
Verified by MonsterInsights