Best of April

Best of April - BLARB

May 1, 2017

    Dearest supporters, readers, and friends:


    They say April is the coolest month. (That’s how it goes, right?) Well it was pretty cool over here at LARB, where we spent the month gabbing about movies, politics, music, art, and of course, good ol’ paper books. We present to you the Best of April; at least, according to us, your friends at the Los Angeles Review of Books.


    ¤


    In Praise of Slowness


    By Henry Martyn Lloyd


    Henry Martyn Lloyd on “The Slow Professor” and “Slow Philosophy.”


    Moving Target: Is “Homeland” Still Racist?


    By Brian T. Edwards


    Has the Showtime series finally changed its ways? Brian T. Edwards finds out.


    Nietzsche’s Horse


    By Chris Townsend


    Chris Townsend traces the tale of Nietzsche and the Turin horse.


    Post-Interest Politics


    By Faisal Devji


    Are we looking at a political realignment?


    The Berth of Biopolitics


    By Matt Seybold


    On Dr. David Dao’s involuntary deplaning and the failure of neoliberal political economy to abide its own purported logic.


    Sympathy for the White Devil: Phoebe Maltz Bovy’s “The Perils of Privilege”


    By Jacqui Shine


    Jacqui Shine reviews Phoebe Maltz Bovy’s “The Perils of ‘Privilege’.”


    S-Town: When a Podcast Becomes a Book


    By Nic Dobija-Nootens


    The “S-Town” podcast breaks new ground by functioning as a nonfiction novel.


    The Ghost in the Ghost


    By Anne Anlin Cheng


    Anne Anlin Cheng on “Ghost in the Shell.” 


    Making Meaning at Coachella, in an Era of Collapse


    By John W. W. Zeiser


    On the spectacle of Coachella, the crown jewel of our period of late capitalism. 


    Between Philosophy and History: on Guido Mazzoni’s “Theory of the Novel”


    By Alberto Comparini


    Alberto Comparini delves into “Theory of the Novel” by Guido Mazzoni.


    “Literature with a Capital L”: On Arthur Krystal’s “This Thing We Call Literature”


    By Patrick Kurp


    Patrick Kurp appreciates the serious “sallies” of “This Thing We Call Literature” by Arthur Krystal.


    Why Afrofuturism Matters


    By Elizabeth Reich


    Why Afrofuturism Matters for art, politics, and life.


    The Girls Finale


    By Jane Hu, Lili Loofbourow, Philip Maciak


    Dear TV says goodbye to “Girls.”


    An Interview with Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o


    By Nanda Dyssou


    Nanda Dyssou talks to Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o about writing in native languages, living in exile, and his hope for Africa.


    You Can’t Have Me: Feminist Infiltrations in Object-Oriented Ontology


    By Rebekah Sheldon


    Rebekah Sheldon on “Object-Oriented Feminism.” 


    Is It Time to Retire the Word “Citizen”?


    By Kate Reed Petty


    Should we retire the word “citizen” for something more inclusionary?


    On Impractical Urges


    Via Guernica


    By Ayana Mathis


    What America's cult of success hates to admit: race and class can shape not just the path to realizing ambitions, but even whether we recognize our right to have them.

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