Border Economies, Broken Lives In Kashmir, a chaos of trade, smuggling, and surveillance shapes the “cold peace” between India and Pakistan
What is the DOGE? The debt, the DOGE, and the crisis of competence in an era of rising “national conservatism”
Listen to Your Heart After the Gaza genocide, Elia Suleiman’s 1996 classic film Chronicle of a Disappearance shows us how life can persist
An Interview with Jafar Panahi Our correspondent met with the great Iranian director to get his thoughts on political cinema, what it means to go back behind the camera, and what gets lost in translation.
Back PagesOnlineReviewsLove in the Age of Cronenberg Only now is the world ready for the queer, kinky idea of love in David Cronenberg's films C.M. Crockford
Back PagesOnlineReviewsOur Neighbor From Hell "May December" asks hard questions about what a community does with its monsters Kyle Flannery
Back PagesOnlineThe Triple ReviewWell That Doesn’t Sound Like Fun On boredom, board games, and Debord Elizabeth Sandifer
Back PagesIssue 3ReviewsA Specter Hangs Over the Hamptons Couch Inside the Outsider Art fair Jake Romm
Back PagesInterviewsOnlineSpiraling Melancholia An interview with Fox Maxy, whose films explore identity in frenetic first-person shots Edward Frumkin and Fox Maxy
Back PagesOnlineReviewsThe Hero as a Drifting Shadow The latest novel by the mysterious Joseph Andras gathers traces of Ho Chi Minh’s pre-revolutionary youth Jim Henderson
Back PagesIssue 3In the Domain of the Unknown From death mask to CPR manikin, L'Inconnue de la Seine is a mythic symbol of our attempts to grapple with death - or reverse it. KS Brewer
Back PagesOnlineReviewsCan Fascism Think? The deafening silence around Heidegger’s fascism has been broken – what does this mean for philosophy and politics? R.K. Hegelman