agathe-dorra

17978 Articles by: Agathe Dorra

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Agathe Dorra is a PhD researcher in political aesthetics at King’s College London

Southern Strategy Soundtracks

Country music became the sound of Richard Nixon’s coalition in the early 1970s — but it has always been too unruly to be fully co-opted by a reactionary agenda.

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The Redneck Menace

White Rural Rage is another attempt to blame the Democratic Party’s decline in rural counties on mean and bigoted white Americans.

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Hayao Miyazaki’s Red Roots

Studio Ghibli is not the Japanese Disney but the anti-Disney. Dreamed up by animators with roots in the Japanese communist movement, its films celebrate creative labor and human solidarity against capitalism and war.

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An Unusable Past

Nicolas Grospierre’s photographs of collective farm buildings in Israel and the Baltic states reveal these communities’ utopian dreams — and their uncomfortable colonial underpinnings.

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Communing With Nature

After stints in Haight-Ashbury, as many as one million hippies headed for the hills. Some of their communes have persisted into the present.

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The UAW Heads South

The South has long remained a nearly impenetrable citadel for labor. Fresh off the success of its Big Three strike, the United Auto Workers wants to storm the castle.

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Communist Cowboys

The Eastern Bloc’s “Ostern” filmmaking turned the mythology of the American Western on its head.

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The People’s Propaganda

In the golden age of American political cartooning, Populist artists lampooned injustices that their contemporaries overlooked.

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When Bernie Went Back to the Land

While free love, weed, and tie-dye might not have been his bag, even the young Bernard Sanders of Brooklyn, NY, tried a life of living off the land. It didn’t work out.

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