Skip to content

The New Inquiry

modern scholarship

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Subscribe
  • Essays & Reviews
  • Features
  • Blogs
  • Audio
  • Current Issue
  • Past Issues
  • Shop
  • About
  • Search
  • Login
  • Subscribe for $2

AMLO All Along

By Pedro GersonNovember 26, 2024
Obradorismo was nationalist austerity governance under the pretense of left-wing populism
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of December 8, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberDecember 10, 2019
The first vegan nutrition center, lettuce grown underground, and goose jerky made above.
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of December 1, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberDecember 3, 2019
Railroad dining car menus of yore, the year's best cookbooks and food writing, and food-insecure students.
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of November 25, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberNovember 25, 2019
Blackout food spoilage, the delights of snacking, and the perils of a Trader Joe's parking lot.
Latest Issue

Assets

Vol. 76 | July 2022

Download this issue

News

Song Yang's Vigil

By The New InquiryNovember 24, 2019
Join Red Canary Song Saturday, November 30 to imagine a world where all massage parlor workers are safe and respected
Essays & Reviews

Chaos Will Set You Free

By Alex QuichoNovember 18, 2019
Gina Apostol’s Insurrecto is a novel that embraces its own instability to narrate the palimpsests of violence that bind the U.S. and the Philippines
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of November 17)

By Christine BaumgarthuberNovember 18, 2019
Remembrances of tastes past, the virtues of nutrient particles, and reclaiming food sovereignty with acorns.
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of November 10, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberNovember 11, 2019
Fungal steaks, frozen food, and toddlers hooked on junk food.
Features

Pinko Is Here

By The New InquiryNovember 7, 2019
What can gay liberation mean today?
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of November 3, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberNovember 4, 2019
The perils of food delivery, the food supply chain mapped, and an in-flight meal hall of shame.
Essays & Reviews

Work Sucks

By Kassandra VeeOctober 28, 2019
The revolution will not be a job fair. No one is gonna check your CV.
Essays & Reviews

The Sonic Episteme

By Robin JamesOctober 23, 2019
To use sound as a tool for theorizing and realizing a more just world, we can’t merely reform Western modernity; we must do something else entirely
Features

You Make Me Swoon

By Lou Sullivan, Ellis Martin and Zach OzmaOctober 16, 2019
An edited excerpt from We Both Laughed in Pleasure: The Selected Diaries of Lou Sullivan
The Austerity Kitchen

Pyttipanna (Links for the Week of October 13, 2019)

By Christine BaumgarthuberOctober 14, 2019
Taste-based labeling, ghost kitchens, and microplastic in our food.
Essays & Reviews

Burial Ground Acknowledgements

By Lou CornumOctober 14, 2019
Land acknowledgments as acts of institutional inclusion obscure the antagonism that follows from genocide
Features

On Heteropessimism

By Asa SeresinOctober 9, 2019
Heterosexuality is nobody’s personal problem.

Posts navigation

«Previous Posts 1 … 10 11 12 13 14 … 235 Next Posts»

Bail Bloc 2.0

Our work on immigration, ICE, borders, and detention

Features

Liquid Border

By Annalisa Camilli and Eleanor PaynterAugust 20, 2019
An excerpt from The Law of the Sea by Annalisa Camilli
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.
Essays & Reviews

Abolish the ICE Prison Complex

By Cesar Cuauhtemoc Garcia HernandezMay 16, 2018
A recent Supreme Court decision reminds us that the law has no interest in lifting the veil that covers immigration prisons
Essays & Reviews, Features

Border Theories

By Marcos Santiago GonsalezNovember 13, 2017
What would it look like to put a power structure on trial? Interweaving visual narratives of the Mexico–United States border show the uneasy relation between objects and people.
Essays & Reviews

Soft Borders

By Jack GrossSeptember 15, 2017
The soft patriotic trust in Canada's softly administered border is fully compatible with the logic of restriction.
Essays & Reviews

Fash at Sea

By Mohammed Harun ArsalaiSeptember 15, 2017
The end of Defend Europe’s fascistic campaign to block migrants’ boats in the Mediterranean doesn’t mean the threat is over
Essays & Reviews

Operation Streamline

By Brandon ShimodaMay 3, 2017
The border’s dream is for undocumented immigrants to be its most reliable missionaries. But the immigrant who crosses the border is the affirmation of a life that transcends it.
Essays & Reviews

In the Water

By Karla Cornejo VillavicencioJanuary 18, 2017
An immigrant in the water is a story or a lesson, but an immigrant on land is our responsibility--they might become our neighbor
Uncategorized

Cross-Border Operations

By Angela Mitropoulos and Matthew KiemNovember 18, 2015
It is no longer plausible to describe the state’s borders as geographically fixed or the state as distinguishable from capital or “markets.”
Essays & Reviews

Empire Records

By Darryl LiMarch 25, 2015
Guantánamo Diary's missing passages connect it with the US empire's deeper history of far-flung capture and detention networks
  • Contact
  • Submit
  • Donate
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Manage Subscription
  • Browse the Archive
  • Terms Of Use
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • Instagram
  • RSS

Subscribe to Newsletter