Blog

  • Andres Rodriguez

    Kanders Must Go: An Open Letter from Theorists, Critics, and Scholars [Updated list of signatories]

    Open letter signed by theorists, critics, and scholars calling for the removal of Warren B. Kanders – CEO of a company responsible for the manufacturing and marketing of weapons such as the tear gas used against migrant families at the U.S./Mexico border, Water Protectors at Standing Rock, protestors in Ferguson, Oakland, Palestine, Puerto Rico, Egypt – from the board of the Whitney Museum.

    Now updated with the signatures of more than 100 artists, including a number of artists participating in the upcoming 2019 Whitney Biennial.

  • Crush the Saboteurs

    Crush the Saboteurs

    Since Jeremy Corbyn became leader of the Labour Party, the language of treason has returned to British political discourse - notably so with the recent video footage of soldiers in Afghanistan firing at a picture of Corbyn and Nigel Farage's claims that he would ‘pick up a rifle’ if Brexit was not delivered. In this article, Eleanor Penny analyses what it at stake in this new language of treason and what that means for British politics and society.

  • An Interview with Brian Eno

    An Interview with Brian Eno

    On the latest Suite (212) on Resonance FM, Juliet Jacques talks to Brian Eno, about new music, new technology, neoliberalism, and the responsibilities of artists in 2019.

  • Solidarity is a verb: the promise of Ilhan Omar

    Solidarity is a verb: the promise of Ilhan Omar

    March saw attacks on Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar for expressing solidarity with the people of Palestine and for criticising the outsized U.S. political preoccupation with the Israeli state. In this article, Sophia Azeb reads the targeting of Omar through the work of the late poet and activist June Jordan, and argues that only by bearing witness can we hold the state to account.

  • The Paras in Kabul

    The Paras in Kabul

    Paratroopers in Kabul recently provoked controversy by filming themselves using an image of Jeremy Corbyn for target practice. In this piece, Tariq Ali placed the incident in the context of the establishment's fears of having Corbyn as Prime Minister.