Ideal Home Noise (4): Chytilova, Ocampo, Bourgeois
Jeff Jackson11.12.15
Jeff Jackson with his latest monthly roundup of stimulating creations, this month including the work of Vera Chytilova, Silvina Ocampo, and Louise Bourgeois.
Three Poems
Claire Donato11.11.15
“It would seem death made me a man / But instead it made me an inversion.” Three new poems by Claire Donato.
You Say Tomato, I Say A Thousand-Year Drought: An Interview with Roy Scranton
Chris Holdaway11.10.15
Why worry about climate change when we’re all already zombies? Chris Holdaway goes in deep with author with Roy Scranton on where the hell to go from here, in the context of his new book, Learning to Die in the Anthropocene.
Of Death and Los Angeles
Erin Wisti11.09.15
Erin Wisti’s essay on her trip to the Museum of Death in Los Angeles.
Positively Schizophrenic Power: An Interview with Actually Huizenga
Sunni Johnson11.05.15
Sunni Johnson in conversation with porn-pop video artist extraordinaire Actually Huizenga about her bewitching new short movie, Viking Angel.
THEY SHARE MEALS
Rhoads Stevens11.04.15
“I asked her if they were pinching her, and she said no. She said let’s rub asses.” New short fiction by Rhoads Stevens.
Numb & Number – The Revolution Will Not Be Brooklynized
Scott Creney11.03.15
Scott Creney tries to find anything other than Joshua Cohen and Ben Lerner in the new ‘novels’ from Joshua Cohen and Ben Lerner.
On The Meaning of the Confederate Flag: William Pope.L and Robert E. Lee (An open letter to Southern Culture from an accidental exile)
Guy Benjamin Brookshire11.02.15
“The flag is humanity’s worst attempt to control the wind. A murder kite. An invitation to war.” Guy Brookshire takes a long hard look at the problematic legacy of the Confederate flag from secessionist William Miles to Dylann Roof, including stops along the way for Jasper Johns and Vanessa Place.
Four Poems
TC Tolbert10.30.15
“42 dragonflies and when they get after each other / they become the machine we always wanted to be.” Four new poems by TC Tolbert, selected by Fall poetry editor, Julia Cohen.