The Brooklyn Rail

Critical Perspectives on Art, Politics and Culture

OCT 2011

The Brooklyn Rail



  • Local
  • Express
  • Art
  • ArtSeen
  • Books
  • Music
  • Dance
  • Film
  • Theater
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Art Books
  • LastWords
  • Home
  • table of contents






Express

Peacetime Soldier

by Matthew Igoe

Express

It’s been 10 years since the post-9/11 wars began. Both Iraq and Afghanistan are miserable failures—over there and at home.

WHEN ONE IS NOT ENOUGH
An Excerpt from Secrets and Wives

by Sanjiv Bhattacharya

Express

It’s a low overcast day as I leave Salt Lake City. Splatterings of showers from a dirty sky. I’m heading for Manti, the home of a polygamous group called the True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days (TLC), led by the prophet James D. Harmston.

Joe, We Hardly Knew Ya

by Gabriel Thompson

Express

In 1902, a young man named Joel Hägglund boarded a ship from Sweden to the United States. Like many immigrants of the period, he had managed to squeeze a lifetime’s worth of hardship into his short existence: his father had died from head injuries suffered on the job, while his mother was laid to waste by the macabre-sounding “consumption of the spine.”

The Sharpest Beach Bums You’ll Ever Meet

by Ross Barkan

Express

Give McKenzie Wark credit. Getting in the ring with Guy Debord and his Situationist crew and making their quixotic vision of a world wholly unlike this one seem palatable and almost reasonable is an accomplishment.

The 1920s: The Good Times?

by David Rosen

Express

The 1920s are back, bigger and better than ever.

Thirst For Debt

by Allen Wilcox

Express

In literature, as in life, the importance of being responsible with one’s money is as central a moral issue as being responsible with one’s words. Oftentimes, a breech in one will upset a balance in the other.

ARE YOU WHAT YOU WEAR?
The Politics of Fashion

by David Rosen

Express

In the decade spanning the mid-1930s to mid-’40s, a new male fashion emerged and gained popularity thoughout the country. It also provoked much controversy. It was the new style of the youthful sharpie, the jitterbuger, the zoot suiter.

 

ADVERTISEMENTS
Change.org|Free Online Petitions
  • Copyright 2005-2012 The Brooklyn Rail
  • ABOUT
  • ARCHIVES
  • CONTACT
  • EVENTS
  • SUBMIT
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • SUPPORT