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OverviewIn Boston Review's new issue Brute Force and Plunder, Asl . Bli and Aziz Rana trace the path to the Trump doctrine through U.S. coercion in the Middle East, Gerald Epstein examines the crypto coalition's plan, and Vivian Gornick revisits a childhood memoir from Nazi Germany. Also in this issue: On ICE: Robin D. G. Kelley puts terror tactics in context, Liv Veazey covers the Canal Street raids, and Joshua Craze reports from immigration court Adam Bonica and Jake Grumbach unpack Democrats' timidity in the face of authoritarianism Photographer Salih Basheer documents loss and displacement in Sudan Benjamin Balthaser reviews historian Mark Mazower's On Antisemitism Plus columns by Olfmi O. Tw and David Austin Walsh; fiction from Emmett Rensin; and a special 50th anniversary archive feature with introductions from George Scialabba, Jeet Heer, Junot Daz, Jessie Kindig, Daniel Denvir, Pankaj Mishra, and Katrina vanden Heuvel. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Robin D. G. Kelley , Rana Aziz , Olfmi O. Tw , Vivian GornickPublisher: Haymarket Books Imprint: Haymarket Books ISBN: 9798993749419Pages: 174 Publication Date: 08 July 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: In Print Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviews""Boston Review is unique and simply indispensable in its dignified refusal to phrase essential critiques in vague or sentimental pieties."" --Pankaj Mishra, essayist and novelist on A. Dirk Moses's essay ""More than Genocide"" ""Like the best Boston Review essays, Hogeland's counternarrative is work of brisk, common-sense radicalism. It presciently outlined the contours of the new elite ideology of militaristic plutocracy that disguised itself as a national origin story of democratic meritocracy."" --Jeet Heer, national affairs correspondent for The Nation on William Hogeland's essay ""Inventing Alexander Hamilton"" ""We need essays like this, and magazines like Boston Review, to see through the self-serving narratives of the powerful and expose the injustice that so many insist on obscuring."" --Daniel Denvir, writer and host of The Dig on Harsha Walia's essay ""There Is No 'Migrant Crisis'"" Author InformationRobin D. G. Kelley is Distinguished Professor and Gary B. Nash Endowed Chair of U.S. History at UCLA and a contributing editor at Boston Review. His many books include Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination. . . Taking a Long Look: Essays on Culture, Literature, and Feminism in Our Time. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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