Dissent Magazine Subscribe to Dissent



The night after Mubarak's fall in Cairo (Joseph Hill/Flickr)
“We have new allies and comrades in the Arab world—the young people (and some older people too), who are fighting for freedom and democracy,” writes Michael Walzer. But democracy “isn’t triumphant, not yet; the hardest fights lie ahead. The odds are not good—not because of any special features of Arab political culture but because they are never good...Our friends can build on the excitement of the last weeks, but hope and worry, together, are necessary for the next stage.”
Read
CONVENIENT SCAPEGOAT: Public Workers under Assault
Joseph A McCartin describes the making of an anti-union moment: “Although the data do not support the politically motivated attacks on public sector workers and their unions, a confluence of powerful factors has created a perfect storm that is overriding the facts, abetting efforts to scapegoat public employees and their unions, and making it easier for anti-union opinion makers to use a few outlying cases to drive a larger assault against the very concept of public sector unionism itself.” (Image: Paul Baker/2011)
THE HOME THAT REMAINS
Elia Suleiman's film The Time that Remains features four vignettes set in Palestine, spanning from 1948 to the present. Suleiman "has a hard time living with what he views as the volatile, oppressive, and absurd nature of being an Israeli Arab," writes Leonard Quart, "but it remains the experience that shapes his art."
GOD AND DEMOCRACY IN THE STREETS OF EGYPT
Jo-Ann Mort describes the political possibilites that have opened up in North Africa: "...The revolution happening in Egypt today...is the beginning of something different for the Arab world. It offers the United States and Israel a young and educated constituency with which to engage...They are hungry for their chance to better their own countries, and they are looking less for enemies than for their own self-fulfillment." (Image: Army tank with Anti-Mubarak graffiti (Mona/Wiki. Commons/2011)
DANIEL BELL AND THE END OF IDEOLOGY
The United States has a president who "claims the post-ideological, responsible center" yet "stands accused of promulgating socialism by Americans who have no memory, and little understanding, of socialist ideology," writes John Summers. "Such is life after ideology." When Daniel Bell sounded ideology's death knell fifty years ago, he said little about its non-Marxist forms. "Of these forms, which focus disagreement and discipline action, contemporary America may need more." (Image: OTFW/Wiki. Commons/2010)
CULT STUD MUGGED: Why We Should Stop Worrying and Learn To Love a Hip English Professor
What accounts for Andrew Ross's journey from cultural studies celebrity to chronicler of deteriorating labor conditions? It was an "intellectual mugging," writes Kevin Mattson. "What once appeared to be a liberating application of high theory to essential aspects of political and cultural experience now seems silly. Tenured radicals have awakened out of their comfortable nineties slumber to reckon with full-scale catastrophe." (Images: Siebbi/2008/Wikimedia Commons; 2005/Wikimedia Commons)
REMEMBERING DANIEL BELL
Daniel Bell - sociologist, writer, editor, and public intellectual - died in late January at age ninety-one. Here, Michael Kazin, Morris Dickstein, and Daniel A. Bell remember his life and career. Writes Kazin, "For Dan, to be an intellectual was to be engaged, rationally but intensely, in the unending effort to define and realize a better world."
A TANGLED WEB: The Misguided Battle against Online Copyright Infringement
Last November, the federal government shut down eighteen websites alleged to have engaged in "wilfull copyright infringement." "While the November shutdowns were limited to a one-time, concentrated effort, the philosophy that guided them might soon become law," writes Liel Leibovitz. But it will do little to solve the problem of protecting intellectual property on the Net. (Image: banner used in Operation In Our Sites)
GLENN BECK'S ATTACK ON FRANCES FOX PIVEN
"If anyone thinks that the vitriol that Glenn Beck spews on his radio and TV shows can't stir people to aggressive and hateful action," writes Peter Dreier, "they should take a look at the postings on his website, the Blaze, about Frances Fox Piven." She is "'unnerved' by this recent wave of blog attacks and death threats...But she's determined not to let the right-wing assault intimidate her." (Image: Glenn Beck [Luke X. Martin/Wiki. Commons/2010])
OBAMA AND DARFUR: The Futility of Mere Hopefulness
In 2008, Candidate Obama criticized the Bush Administration's "reckless and cynical" policy in Darfur, arguing that "Washington must respond to the ongoing genocide...with consistency and strong consequences." "But Obama's policies, no less than Bush's," write Eric Reeves, "are 'reckless and cynical.'" Obama "cannot slough off responsibility for what he himself called a 'policy of genocide.'" (Image: Obama and Sudan Envoy Scott Gration; State Dept)
REAL MEN FIND REAL UTOPIAS
Erik Olin Wright’s Envisioning Real Utopias “seeks to counter widespread cynicism about radical social transformation,” writes Russell Jacoby. But in the end, “the book is startling and depressing evidence of what has happened to American academic Marxism, at least its sociological variant, over the last thirty years. It has become turgid, vapid, and self-referential.” (Image: Robert Owen’s New Harmony, Indiana, engraved by F. Tate in 1838)
OBAMA AND THE MEDIA
Though the Fox News Channel is often called a "biased" cable news station, "few dispute the journalistic orientation of the overall enterprise," writes Eric Alterman. "This is a mistake. Fox is something new...It provides almost no actual journalism. Instead, it gives ideological guidance to the Republican party and millions of its supporters...[It] functions as the equivalent of a political perpetual motion machine." (Image: Chuck Kennedy/White House/2009).
GOT DOUGH? Public School Reform in the Age of Venture Philanthropy
Joanne Barkan reports on how the Gates Foundation, the Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation have exerted influence on education policy in the United States. "A few billion dollars in private foundation money, strategically invested every year for a decade, has sufficed to define the national debate on education; sustain a crusade for a set of mostly ill-conceived reforms; and determine public policy at the local, state, and national levels." See an MSNBC interview with Barkan about this article here. (Image: Bill Gates; Guety/Wikimedia Commons/2004)
CHROMIUM, CANCER, AND THE CIA
A recent study reported the discovery of toxic chromium in tap water across the United States. The small amounts detected might not be dangerous, but as Ben Ross writes, "The appearance of scientific uncertainty can be used to ward off regulation of toxic substances, so money and influence are applied to create artificial disagreement." The histoy of suppressed information surrounding chromium toxicity is no different - and it "leads behind the curtains of history's center stage." (Image: Dr. Willard Machle; National Library of Medicine)
THE MISSING ECONOMIC QUESTION IN INDEPENDENT IRELAND
After two years of economic floundering, the Irish government accepted an EU/IMF bailout package in November. But, Luke McDonagh argues, Ireland's economic woes began much earlier than 2008: "For most of its independent lifetime, a succession of governments has proven incompetent at governing the country's economy....From 1922 onward, there is not one Irish government that economic historians can judge kindly." (Image: Anti-austerity protests in December; J.P. Anderson)
STATE OF DISORDER: Russia’s Ultranationalist Problem
On December 11, a memorial held in Moscow for slain soccer fan Yegor Sviridov turned violent, with ethnic Russians targeting the minorities they blamed for the murder. "The violence on the streets reflects an increasing popular disaffection with the corruption of the Russian political system," writes Rafael Khachaturian. "How the current authorities navigate around this issue is sure to play a role in whether United Russia will maintain its place of power." (Image: Protestors hold a sign with Yegor Sviridov's face; Kirill Lebedev)
KAWASAKI'S ROSE: A World of Irony and Ambiguity
Kawasaki's Rose is "the first ever Czech or Slovak feature film to deal with the subject of informing and cooperation with the Communist secret police and the nature of collective memory," writes Leonard Quart. "Whatever its minor flaws, this film is a trenchant work about how one lives with a toxic history, where coming out unscathed may be a next to an impossible task." (Image: Archivaldo/Wikimedia Commons/1999)
MEN OF WAR
Connectum, a "Sarajevo-based publishing house" without "native English editors or a global distributor," has released two books that "effectively double the number of Bosnian Muslim works in prose about the [Bosnian] war available in English translation," writes James Thomas Snyder. "Let us hope Connectum finds a partnering publisher and distributor willing to take a risk on future translations...Our literature will be richer, and this aspirant nation will only benefit, for the effort." (Image: UN troops in Sarajevo, Nov. 1995; Paalso/Wikimedia Commons)
LIU XIAOBO AND THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
The Chinese government forbade Liu Xiaobo, and his acquaintances, from accepting the Nobel Peace Prize last Friday and sponsored the creation of a Chinese alternative to the Norwegian award. While these actions led some to compare the Chinese government to the Nazi regime, "[it] is worth keeping in mind," writes Jeffrey Wasserstrom, "that some Chinese government actions paralleled...those of authoritarian regimes far less nakedly brutal than Nazi Germany's-such as Poland's, circa 1983." (Image: Liu Xiaobo [2nd from left] in 1989; 64memo.com)
THE FRONT LINE IN KYRGYZSTAN: Who Does Human Rights?
The wave of ethnic violence in southern Kyrgyzstan this past June has subsided, but for weeks little stood to defend the Uzbek minority from attacks, arbitrary detention, and police abuse. Before the UN and other international governmental organizations had arrived, writes Sam Kahn, Human Rights Watch's Emergency Team--"a mix of a criminal investigator, a journalist, and a social worker"--was there, struggling to overcome "the international community's lethargy and lack of coordination." (Image: graffiti in an Uzbek neighborhood in Osh; Sam Kahn/2010)
ANTI-SEMITISM AND IGNORANCE
Gilbert Achcar's The Arabs and the Holocaust usefully "challenges the propensity of much...scholarship to vilify all Arabs by lumping them together and assigning them a shared, primitive anti-Semitic mindset," writes Fredrik Meiton. Yet the book "goes too far in the other direction. [Achcar] seems stubbornly insistent on contextualizing anti-Semitism out of existence." (Image: Grand Mufti of Jerusalem; German Federal Archive/1943)
Click here for more articles