Features Vol. 72 Editors’ Note: Bad Vibes By TNIOctober 7, 2019 A rough cut of emotion and body language, what we might one day call “our affective commons”
Features Summertime Selves (On Professionalization) By Nick MitchellOctober 4, 2019 The summertime self discloses the logic of the utopian university fantasy: Probably never are we more of it than when we think we’re outside of it.
Features So Many Secrets By Crystal Stella Becerril, Kaitlyn Chandler, Dana Kopel, Haley Mlotek and Art and LaborOctober 1, 2019 A roundtable on cultural organizing in New York City
Features Acta del Desastre By Shellyne Rodriguez, Iris Dipini and Comité por la Defensa AntillanaSeptember 11, 2019 El levantamiento de Puerto Rico y la Instrumentalización de Lin-Manuel Miranda
Features Disaster Act By Shellyne Rodriguez, Iris Dipini and Comité por la Defensa AntillanaSeptember 11, 2019 Puerto Rico’s uprising and the instrumentalization of Lin-Manuel Miranda
Features Liquid Border By Annalisa Camilli and Eleanor PaynterAugust 20, 2019 An excerpt from The Law of the Sea by Annalisa Camilli
Features I Felt Myself By Michel LeirisAugust 7, 2019 An excerpt from The Ribbon at Olympia’s Throat, translated by Christine Pichini
Features Fight for the Future By Lou CornumAugust 2, 2019 On Mauna Kea hundreds are holding a refuge and defending land from the proponents of false progress
Features Nia in Two Acts By Leigh RaifordJuly 26, 2019 A year after her murder, reflecting on Nia Wilson reveals the ways black girls struggle against erasure while also reveling in opacity
Features All Housing Doesn’t Matter By Rico Cleffi and Erin McElroyJuly 24, 2019 An interview with Anti-Eviction Mapping Project cofounder Erin McElroy
Features The Beautiful Struggle By Daphne A. BrooksJuly 22, 2019 A meditative syllabus on Saidiya Hartman’s book Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Social Upheaval
Features Vol. 71 Editors' Note: Escape By The New InquiryJuly 17, 2019 How the hell do I get out of here?
Features United States v. Scott Daniel Warren By LazzJune 27, 2019 The criminalization of humanitarian aid at the border enacts a fantasy of desolate individuation. Scott Warren’s felony trial reiterates the necessity to keep reaching out.
Features The Limit Does Not Exist By Uriah Marc TodoroffJune 10, 2019 An interview with Marxist philosopher Joshua Moufawad-Paul about the science of revolution at a time when socialism is supposedly becoming mainstream
Features Old Neighbors, New Battles By Denzel Sutherland-Wilson and Anne SpiceJune 5, 2019 Rekindling Indigenous relations against colonial violence