Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Person
Naomi Klein
Bylines
Surrealism Against Fascism
A century ago, artists who survived the trenches captured humanity’s capacity for destruction. What can they teach us in a new age of genocide?
by
Naomi Klein
via
Equator
on
November 26, 2025
Related Excerpts
Viewing 1–7 of 7
The Wild History of “Lesser of Two Evils” Voting
For as long as Americans have been subjected to lousy candidates, they’ve been told to suck it up and vote for one of them.
by
Ginny Hogan
via
The Nation
on
March 19, 2024
Capitalism and Fire in the Nineteenth-Century United States
L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is productively understood in terms of this widespread fight over the value of fire and the shape of capitalism.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
Past & Present
on
March 9, 2024
Why Do We Eat Bad Food?
Mark Bittman’s new history looks at the economy and politics of junk food.
by
Bill McKibben
via
The Nation
on
May 18, 2021
The Seattle Protests Showed Another World Is Possible
Twenty years ago, demonstrations against the World Trade Organization opened the space for today’s critics of neoliberal capitalism.
by
Mark Engler
via
The Nation
on
November 29, 2019
The Uses and Abuses of 'Neoliberalism'
Does the term clarify or confuse our understanding of capitalism today?
by
Daniel T. Rodgers
via
Dissent
on
December 13, 2017
Wild Thing: A New Biography of Thoreau
Freeing Thoreau from layers of caricature that have long distorted his legacy.
by
Daegan Miller
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
July 16, 2017
Bonfire of the Humanities
Historians are losing their audience, and searching for the next trend won’t win it back.
by
Samuel Moyn
via
The Nation
on
January 21, 2015