The Baffler No. 20 by John Summers


The Baffler No. 20
Title : The Baffler No. 20
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 172
Publication : First published July 11, 2012

Baffling the consensus since 1988, this journal seeks to debunk the ideology of the free market and to drive public discourse in literate and humane directions. Issues contain thundering anti-business salvos from the sharpest minds, as well as poetry, literature, and satirical art.

Contributions for The Baffler No. 20 (The High, the Low, the Vibrant!) include Thomas Frank on creative-class visions of vibrancy, Steve Almond on the postideological pantomiming of John Stewart and Stephen Colbert, Eugenia Williamson on the narrative conventions of NPR's This American Life, Matt Hinton on the big bucks in the world of college sports, and Jim Newell on the fraudster Adam Wheeler, who faked his way into Harvard.

Contents:

The Head Office

This Cradle Won’t Rock
John Summers


Salvos

Dead End on Shakin’ Street
Thomas Frank

Cash-and-Carry Aesthetics
Jed Perl

The Joke’s on You: Presenting ... The Daily Show and The Colbert Report
Steve Almond

Sit-Cons: Class on TV
Heather Havrilesky

Oh, the Pathos! Presenting ... This American Life
Eugenia Williamson

Accountants for Taste: The Pew Charitable Trusts
David D’Arcy


The Dollar Debauch

Dilemmas of the Rentier Class
Chris Lehmann


Into the Infinite

The Threshold of Joy
Kim Phillips-Fein


Notes & Quotes

The Head Office
Kurt Tucholsky

Daniel’s Dictionary
Daniel Aaron

Maze of Doom
Tod Mesirow

A Bad Day in Brooklyn
Emma Garman


Studies in Total Depravity

Party of None: Barack Obama’s annoying journey to the center of belonging
Chris Bray

Adam Wheeler Went to Harvard
Jim Newell

Billionaire Ball: Epitaph for the student-athlete
Matt Hinton


Stories

Lancelot Gomes
Manohar Shetty

Mr. Secondhand
Manohar Shetty

Bhutas
Saskya Jain


Memoir

Delusional Parasitosis and Me
Will Boisvert


Poems

Faulty Logic
Alan Gilbert

Kingdom and Kingdom 2 (a poetics)
Rae Armantrout

The Back Country
Geoffrey O’Brien

Tranche I and Tranche II
Joshua Clover

Projecting Love
Forrest Gander

The City Mouse and the Country Mouse
Susan Stewart

One Way
Matthea Harvey

The Blackest Black Forest
John Yau

Green Gallows for the Wall Street Bankers
The Homeless Economist


Remainders

Simone de Beauvoir’s Les Belles Images
Seth Colter Walls


Ancestors

Life and Times of a Libertine
Christopher Lasch


The Baffler No. 20 Reviews


  • James

    This is my first issue of The Baffler and I'm smitten. The Thomas Frank essay alone makes this worth getting, but I am 120 pages in and there have been no missteps. Let it suffice to say that, reading this, I felt my heart stir in a way that I had forgotten possible... a little flutter of rekindled fisticuffs, or some such stirring.