A Newly Translated Oral History Reveals Krautrock’s Antifascist Roots
At a Russian Border Post, Scenes of Ruin After Ukraine’s Surprise Attack
Racism Is Why Trump Is So Popular - James Risen
Suneil Sanzgiri
"Waterloo Sunset" - The Kinks (1967)
What’s So New About the ‘New Right’?
"Over the last few years, a loose coalition of conservative thinkers, journalists, publications and think tanks have emerged under the banner of the New Right. With Senator JD Vance, Donald Trump’s running mate, as its flag-bearer, this still-disparate group has been hailed as the intellectual heft behind the MAGA movement, and even as the future of American conservatism. Its very name declares a radical break with the Republican past — 'very nascent, very bleeding edge,' is how Vivek Ramaswamy, a former presidential candidate, described it. But how new is the New Right? It is risky to ascribe coherence to a grouping like this, especially when its ranks range from the relatively buttoned-up Vance and his Senate colleague Josh Hawley to a ragtag assortment of self-described neo-monarchists, techno-libertarians and right-wing Marxists. ..."
What Would Studs Terkel Make of ‘Essential Workers’?
7 Years After ‘Summer of Hell,’ the Subway Is Approaching Another Crisis
Kurtis Blow: The Prototype
Semiotics of fashion
"The semiotics of fashion is the study of fashion and how humans signify specific social and cultural positions through dress. Ferdinand de Saussure defined semiotics
as 'the science of the life of signs in society'. Semiotics is the
study of signs and just as we can interpret signs and construct meaning
from text we can also construct meaning from visual images such as
fashion.
Fashion is a language of signs that non-verbally converse meanings
about individuals and groups. ... Roland Barthes was a semiotician, who studied the fashion system and how ideologies are transmitted through dress. The semiotic system is formed by social interests and ideologies, and the fashion system is no different. In our society the ideologies in fashion are often implemented by celebrities or the dominant class. Jackie Kennedy was an important style icon for American women during the 1960s, where her style became a symbol of wealth, power and prestige. ..."