Powerball and the American Culture of Inequality
On September 12, 1964, Paul Cordone of Gloversville, New York won the biggest lottery jackpot in American history. The previous year, New Hampshire became the first state to legalize a state-operated lottery, selecting winners through a complicated system that involved two separate raffles and a horse race to ensure the ...
Detain and Deport: A Transnational Ethnography of U.S. Immigration Enforcement
Nihilists with Good Imaginations
In what may be her most ambitious piece yet, Chiara Bottici recently published a call for a continuation of debates around intersectional oppression along the lines traced out by anarchist thought. Somewhat surprisingly, though, Bottici avoided making explicit reference to some of her previous work, which, though it may be ...
Perspectivalism Without Relativism: A basis for Susan Henking’s “educated hope” for liberal education
An American Tragedy
Hostile Architecture — Electronic Monitoring
In urban planning, there’s a strategy known as “hostile” or “defensive” architecture, such as the metal spikes built into public ledges to keep people (particularly those who are homeless) from sitting on them. Similarly, a 2013 article in the New York Times described what it called “pocket parks.” After becoming alarmed at the presence ...
Populism, Representation, and Sanders
A Reply to Mueller
In a recent article published on Public Seminar, Jan-Werner Mueller affirmed that populism is by its very nature not only anti-elitist, but also anti-pluralist: “Populists claim that they, and only they, represent the people.” He then attacked the undemocratic tendency populist politicians show when they lose the elections: they “begin to ...
Episode 22: Antonin Scalia, Samantha Bee, and the Grammys
Hannah Arendt, “Standpoints” of History, and Epistemic Pitfalls
Pragmatism’s Promise
One of the many definitions of “dialectic” is “a method of examining and discussing opposing ideas in order to discover the truth”; another is “discussion and reasoning by dialogue as a method of intellectual investigation.” On either definition, Richard J. Bernstein is indisputably the most proficient and prolific ...
Sick Bodies, Hysterical Pregnancies, ISIS Wives
Conversion Disorder
I wonder if “conversion disorder” -- a classical psychiatric term for the conversion of psyche into soma in the form of psychosomatic issues -- could be one way of thinking about the present. Especially with so many patients complaining of bodily symptoms, armed at times with cadres of healers; with ...