The Utopian

Feb 01

A Rights-Based Utopia?

By Adam Etinson.

“Rather than worry about how we might preserve the utopian status of human rights into the future, we ought to worry about how to rescue utopia from the clutches of human rights.

A plea for substantive utopias.

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After Utopia?

By Samuel Moyn.

There is a risk that human rights will be called on to do so much, precisely because no powerful imaginative alternatives exist, that they will lose even the minimal promise of transformation that allow the norms to inspire so many.”

A response to Adam Etinson.

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Dec 05

Occupy Wall Street and the Rediscovery of Politics

By Jeremy Kessler.

“In taking to the streets with their peculiar brand of leadership and organization, the Occupy Wall Street movement taps into a deep American tradition of outdoor politics: for much of American history, the motor of progressive political change was the assembly of the people out-of-doors, coming together to debate and organize beyond the prescribed avenues of official political reform.”

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Dec 01

Thatcher and Conservatism

By Timothy Stanley.

Ask a Conservative what kind of society they’d like to live in and they’ll generally identify the 1950s. This is highly ironic, because the faithful, decent national community that we imagine the 1950s to have been was also economically highly regulated and strongly wedded to the postwar consensus that Margaret Thatcher tore up.”

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Nov 09

The Age of Uncertainty

 By Sheri Berman.

Particularly in the West, what seems striking about the current period is the widespread sense of the need for change combined with the lack of any coherent plans for it.” 

On discontent and its failure to effect transformation.

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Oct 28

Towards a New Manifesto

By Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer.

“We cannot call for the defence of the Western world.”

In 1956, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer sat down to write an updated version of the Communist Manifesto. These are previously unpublished notes from their discussions.

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Sep 27

What is Populism?

By Jan-Werner Mueller.

“What populism necessarily denies is the pluralism of contemporary societies: in the populist imagination there is only the people on the one hand and the illegitimate intruders into our politics, from both above and below, on the other.”

An account of what populism is, and why it is dangerous.

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Aug 15

A Lack of Leadership

By Timothy Stanley.

“Most voters are conservative in that they want peace in the streets yet liberal in that they don’t want to use water cannons to get it.”

What Britain can learn from America’s reaction to the riots of the 1960s.

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England Burning

By Alexander Lee.

“If there is a single underlying cause for the riots, it is to be found in the shocking social problems in Britain’s depressed suburbs and in the gradual abandonment of social questions by mainstream political discourse.”

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Seeing King Lear

By Charles Petersen.

Will there ever be a persuasive staging of Lear, or is the aging king condemned forever to remain most at home in the theater of the mind?

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Aug 12

The People Who Might Still Make the Egyptian Revolution

By Martin Eiermann.

“If you are confused”, Amado assures me, “you are on the right track. Everyone in Egypt is confused.”

A Letter from Cairo.

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Aug 10

The Demonization of “Chavs”

By Owen Jones.

“Demonizing people at the bottom has been a convenient way of justifying an unequal society throughout the ages.”

An Anatomy of Britain’s supposed underclass.

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Blight

By Mac McAnulty.

“Blight guts houses and, in the case of New Orleans, whole neighborhoods. Estimates say the city contains over 50,000 blighted properties, battered remnants, most of them left behind during Hurricane Katrina.”

A letter from New Orleans.

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Shatter the Trees and Blow them Away

By Mark Chiusano.

Like everyone else, someone had come up to me, put a pointer finger in the center of my chests, and said, serve your country.  Make us the Gadget, they said, and your name will be forever.”

A short story.

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