Articles
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Is there a good end for doomers?
In “Doomed to Fail,” J.J. Anselmi provides a detailed examination of doom metal background, and cultural significance.
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Prince Ringard: No age limit in the rebellion
An anarchist singer-poet at the age of 78, giving a hundred free concerts a year to an audience of different generations. Angry and cheerful.
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David Ivison: Why I Am Not An Anarchist
What are the limits of anarchist understanding? A vivid look at the current problem from 1972.
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Makanin’s Asan: Dark myth of in Chechnia
Asan is less a book about Russia’s Chechen battles and more of an unsatisfied, jittery novel that shows how war pushes participants and observers to piece together narratives that explain or justify actions.
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Review: Doom-filled invocations of Earthbong
The third album from German cannabis lords Earthbong completes a hazy, dreamy trilogy of sorts, following 2018’s One Earth One Bong and 2020’s Bong Rites.
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Coincidence and Miracle: Baron Wenckheim’s Homecoming by László Krasznahorkai
László Krasznahorkai’s latest novel, War & War, follows his greatest texts, blending perspectives and enunciations to create a humorous universe with a baron and scientist, recombining infinity and finiteness.
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From father to son, immutable violence – on The son of the man by Jean-Baptiste Del Amo
The Son of Man depicts violence transmitted from person to person without denouncing the paternal figure.
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The Redskins – Neither Washington Nor Moscow
The Redskins was a 1980s English band, notable for its left-wing politics, skinhead image.