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The Baffler
Series · 12
books · 1997-2013

Books in series

The Baffler #9 Workplace book cover
#9

The Baffler #9 Workplace

An Injury to All

1997

Book by
The Baffler Number 11 book cover
#11

The Baffler Number 11

1998

Poetry. Fiction. Cultural Writing. Edited by Thomas Frank, featuring work by Paul Maliszewski, Ben Metcalf, Dan Kelly, T.C. Frank, Josh Glenn & A.S. hamrah, Marc Cooper, Kim Phillips-Fein, Kevin Mattson, Doug Henwood, Tom Vanderbilt, Mike O'Flaherty, Robert Nedelkoff, Michael Berube, Chris Lehmann, Mike Albo, Curtis White, Stephen Rodefer, John Tranter, Douglas Rothschild, Lisa Haney, Jessica Abel, Patrick Welch, David Berman, and Hunter Kennedy.
The Baffler book cover
#12

The Baffler

1999

Baffler #11, Twilight of the Century, continues the irreverent magazine's all-out assault on contemporary pop culture. Fixing their sarcastic radar on middle America, the folks at The Barrier have outdone themselves for this issue, which features bowling shirt images and a flexidisc of Dead Moon singing the theme from "Good Times". Baffler #12 The New American Earthquake finds the Baffler staff in the hinterlands where the "plain folk" aint what they used to be. Baffler invites you to fell the pain of well-armed millenarians, touchy-feely Christian patriarchists, and employees of ChiChi's, Chili's, Cheddar's, Shoney's and Denny's. Yum
The Baffler Magazine #13 book cover
#13

The Baffler Magazine #13

Vox Populoid

2000

Issue #13, "the Backlash Retrospective Part 1: The Classical Years," is the first installment of The Baffler's long-awaited set of issues focusing on the Right. Baffler writers heap sarcasm and scorn on the founding fathers of organized resentment Issue #14, "Part 2: Meltdown," examines the waning of the American century and an impending dark age. Enjoy savage analysis, bitter tales, incisive essays, trenchant reviews, and acerbic writing by their cast of young—Robert Nedelkoff, David Rieff, Owen Hatteras, Pepsy Spengler, and others.
The Baffler Magazine Spring 2001 #14 book cover
#14

The Baffler Magazine Spring 2001 #14

The God That Sucked

2001

Book by
The Baffler Magazine #15 book cover
#15

The Baffler Magazine #15

Civilization with a Krag

2002

In this Issue, Baffler content providers ponder what happens when the mundane things of everyday life-dolls, sports, restaurants, pop music, museums-are given over to the "concept" people to make really big. The results are quintissentially American, and include visits to the Super Bowl, American Girl Place, an Objectivists-owned haute-cuisine joint, and Frank Gehry's McGuggenheim.
The Baffler Magazine No. 16 book cover
#16

The Baffler Magazine No. 16

2003

Down with the regional pundits! We all know how much Rush Limbaugh, Gordon Liddy, Bill O'Reilly, and Ann Coulter suck. The bafflers have, hoever, and they launch a full frontal assault on the small time grippers, professional cynics, and wel paid bitter men of Omaha, Indianapolis, Denver, St. Louis, and Kansas City.
The Baffler #17 book cover
#17

The Baffler #17

2006

"Superslayer Storybook" on the spine. Tom Frank & friends, at his best, inside.
The Baffler No. 19 book cover
#19

The Baffler No. 19

2012

Baffling the consensus since 1988, this journal seeks to debunk the ideology of the free market and to drive public discourse in literate and humane directions. Issues contain thundering anti-business salvos from the sharpest minds, as well as poetry, literature, and satirical art. Contributions for The Baffler No. 19 include Thomas Frank on the age folly, Barbara Ehrenreich on our relationship to big animals, David Graeber on how technology has failed us, Chris Lehmann on the proletarian novelist Ernest Poole, and Rick Perlstein on Ronald Reagan’s path to the presidency. Contents: Philosophical Intelligence Office Decrescendo John Summers Salvos Too Smart to Fail: Notes on an age of folly Thomas Frank I Was a Teenage Gramlich Jim Newell Ronald Reagan's Imaginary Bridges Rick Perlstein Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit David Graeber Future Schlock: Creating the crap of tomorrow at the MIT Media Lab Will Boisvert Revolt of the Gadgets Robert S. Eshelman The Dollar Debauch Water World Chris Lehmann Into the Infinite The Animal Cure Barbara Ehrenreich Notes & Quotes Smells like … Eugenia Williamson My Own Little Mission Dubravka Ugrešić Disposable Hip G. Beato Stories Give Her to Me Ludmilla Petrushevskaya 2312 Kim Stanley Robinson Edge Lands Chris N. Brown Lives of the Pundits Omniscient Gentlemen of The Atlantic Maureen Tkacik Poems Experts are Puzzled Laura Riding from Odi Barbare Geoffrey Hill Strike! Charles Bernstein Syria Renga Marilyn Hacker Snow Globe Peter Gizzi Breaking Stones Nirala Little Princess, or The One-Eyed Girl Nirala Documentia We Told You So: An advance memorandum on the jitters James K. Galbraith Ancestors Cotton Tenants: Three families James Agee
The Baffler No. 20 book cover
#20

The Baffler No. 20

2012

Baffling the consensus since 1988, this journal seeks to debunk the ideology of the free market and to drive public discourse in literate and humane directions. Issues contain thundering anti-business salvos from the sharpest minds, as well as poetry, literature, and satirical art. Contributions for The Baffler No. 20 (The High, the Low, the Vibrant!) include Thomas Frank on creative-class visions of vibrancy, Steve Almond on the postideological pantomiming of John Stewart and Stephen Colbert, Eugenia Williamson on the narrative conventions of NPR's This American Life, Matt Hinton on the big bucks in the world of college sports, and Jim Newell on the fraudster Adam Wheeler, who faked his way into Harvard. The Head Office This Cradle Won’t Rock John Summers Salvos Dead End on Shakin’ Street Thomas Frank Cash-and-Carry Aesthetics Jed Perl The Joke’s on Presenting ... The Daily Show and The Colbert Report Steve Almond Class on TV Heather Havrilesky Oh, the Pathos! Presenting ... This American Life Eugenia Williamson Accountants for The Pew Charitable Trusts David D’Arcy The Dollar Debauch Dilemmas of the Rentier Class Chris Lehmann Into the Infinite The Threshold of Joy Kim Phillips-Fein Notes & Quotes The Head Office Kurt Tucholsky Daniel’s Dictionary Daniel Aaron Maze of Doom Tod Mesirow A Bad Day in Brooklyn Emma Garman Studies in Total Depravity Party of Barack Obama’s annoying journey to the center of belonging Chris Bray Adam Wheeler Went to Harvard Jim Newell Billionaire Epitaph for the student-athlete Matt Hinton Stories Lancelot Gomes Manohar Shetty Mr. Secondhand Manohar Shetty Bhutas Saskya Jain Memoir Delusional Parasitosis and Me Will Boisvert Poems Faulty Logic Alan Gilbert Kingdom and Kingdom 2 (a poetics) Rae Armantrout The Back Country Geoffrey O’Brien Tranche I and Tranche II Joshua Clover Projecting Love Forrest Gander The City Mouse and the Country Mouse Susan Stewart One Way Matthea Harvey The Blackest Black Forest John Yau Green Gallows for the Wall Street Bankers The Homeless Economist Remainders Simone de Beauvoir’s Les Belles Images Seth Colter Walls Ancestors Life and Times of a Libertine Christopher Lasch
The Baffler No. 21 book cover
#21

The Baffler No. 21

2012

In the third and last issue of our revival year, Thomas Frank tells you how theory met practice in Occupy Wall Street (and drove it out of its mind), Rick Perlstein explains how Mitt Romney lies to be loved, and David Graeber asks whether it’s possible to think that you believe something when, in fact, you don’t, or to think that you don’t believe something when, in fact, you do? (Answer: yes and yes). The issue delivers original writing on politics, culture, and media by Will Boisvert, Ana Marie Cox, Barbara Ehrenreich, Belén Fernández, Chris Lehmann, Jason Linkins, Josh MacPhee, Jim Newell, Alex Pareene, Dubravka Ugrešić, and Eugenia Williamson—plus stories, poems, and graphic art by some of the best writers, poets, and illustrators around. And finally, we bring you a previously unpublished waking dream by C. Wright Mills, “If I Were President.” Well, what would you do if you were president? Contents: Tower of Baffler Only a Dream John Summers Salvos To the Precinct Station: How theory met practice . . . and drove it absolutely crazy Thomas Frank The Long Con: Mail-order conservatism Rick Perlstein Can’t Stop Believing: Magic and politics David Graeber Come On, Feel the Buzz Alex Pareene High Church Hustle: CNBC’s televangelists Jason Linkins The Dollar Debauch Oh, the Irony! Chris Lehmann Into the Infinite The Missionary Position Barbara Ehrenreich Other People’s Problems The Code Dubravka Ugrešić Cities of Night Belén Fernández Anything for the Libor Boys Christian Lorentzen Call of the Wild: Detroit on screen Will Boisvert The Rod of Correction Who’s the Shop Steward on Your Kickstarter? Josh MacPhee Notes & Quotes The Lying Game Jim Newell Face Value Ana Marie Cox Three Odd Words Manohar Shetty Story Invasion of Grenada George Singleton Poems Or Why the Assembly Disbanded as Before Roberto Tejada from California Tanka Diary Harryette Mullen Summit Meeting Tony Hoagland Equations Kwame Davis Song of Whiteout and Blackache Ailish Hopper Jeweler Dante Micheaux The Free World Camille Rankine Luke Cool Hand I’m Your Father Fady Joudah Trifling Bureaucracies Credit Carmen Giménez Smith Obituary The Alternative Press in Retrospect Eugenia Williamson Ancestors If I Were President C. Wright Mills
The Baffler No. 22 book cover
#22

The Baffler No. 22

2013

In this issue (Modem and Taboo), Thomas Frank takes us on a tour of the businessman’s republic, while David Graeber leads us into the hearts and minds of the revolutionary opposition. Chris Bray tracks down General David Petraeus and his wandering PhD. Evgeny Morozov takes apart the influential “crazy talk” of Silicon Valley publisher Tim O’Reilly. And Anne Elizabeth Moore explores the hidden assumptions behind Nicholas Kristof’s bid to rescue the women of the world, who have nothing to lose but their market potential. Baffler 22 contains our usual dazzling array of poetry, fiction, and satiric illustration. All this, plus Heather Havrilesky on Fifty Shades of Grey, Hussein Ibish on the Marquis de Sade, Christian Lorentzen on the British pop-star-cum-pedophiliac Jimmy Savile, and Jorian Polis Schutz surveys the state of Yoga in America. Subscribe now, and learn why Slavoj Žižek thinks hard-core pornography is the most censored of all film genres. Table of Contents Philosophical Intelligence Office Negative Capability John Summers Camera Shy, Blah, Blah, Blah Slavoj Žižek A Beauty Dmitry Gorchev Daniel's Dictionary Daniel Aaron Hope is a Kiss Peter Kayafas Politics To Galt's Gulch They Go Thomas Frank A Practical Utopian's Guide to the Coming Collapse David Graeber Culture The State of Stretching: Yoga in America Jorian Polis Schutz Modem and Taboo Passions of the Meritocracy: General David Petraeus and his wandering PhD Chris Bray Marketpiece Theater: Nicholas Kristof and Milton Friedman rescue the world Anne Elizabeth Moore The Meme Hustler: Tim O’Reilly’s crazy talk Evgeny Morozov Fifty Shades of Late Capitalism Heather Havrilesky Predator Drone: Jimmy Savile will see you now Christian Lorentzen United Sades of America Hussein Ibish Poems Diaspora: Breakfast with Mahmoud Darwish Kristina Robinson Taverna Manohar Shetty Grim Sleeper Terese Svoboda Underground John Keene Di$claimer Amy Gerstler Accounting for the Damage Jocelyn Burrell Inside the House Cathy Park Long Sphinx Infinitives Tyrone Williams The Robots Are Coming Kyle Gargan Stories The Agony of Leaves Mahesh Rao Up in Birdland Monica Hileman Ancestors Jean-Arthur Rimbaud: For his 100th birthday Thomas Bernhard Graphic Art Brad Holland Mark Dancey Steve Brodner

Authors

Kim Phillips-Fein
Author · 3 books
Kimberly Phillips-Fein is a historian of twentieth-century American politics. She teaches courses in American political, business, and labor history. She has contributed to essay collections published by Harvard University Press, University of Pennsylvania Press and Routledge and to journals such as Reviews in American History and International Labor and Working-Class History. Professor Phillips-Fein has written widely for publications including the Nation, London Review of Books, New Labor Forum, to which she has contributed articles and reviews. She is currently working on a new project about New York City in the 1970s.
Christopher Lasch
Christopher Lasch
Author · 11 books

Christopher "Kit" Lasch (June 1, 1932 – February 14, 1994) was an American historian, moralist, and social critic who was a history professor at the University of Rochester. Lasch sought to use history as a tool to awaken American society to the pervasiveness with which major institutions, public and private, were eroding the competence and independence of families and communities. He strove to create a historically informed social criticism that could teach Americans how to deal with rampant consumerism, proletarianization, and what he famously labeled the 'culture of narcissism.' His books, including The New Radicalism in America (1965), Haven in a Heartless World (1977), The Culture of Narcissism (1979), and The True and Only Heaven (1991), and The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy published posthumously in 1996 were widely discussed and reviewed. The Culture of Narcissism became a surprise best-seller and won the National Book Award in the category Current Interest (paperback). Lasch was always a critic of liberalism, and a historian of liberalism's discontents, but over time his political perspective evolved dramatically. In the 1960s, he was a neo-Marxist and acerbic critic of Cold War liberalism. During the 1970s, he began to become a far more iconoclastic figure, fusing cultural conservatism with a Marxian critique of capitalism, and drawing on Freud-influenced critical theory to diagnose the ongoing deterioration that he perceived in American culture and politics. His writings during this period are considered contradictory. They are sometimes denounced by feminists and hailed by conservatives for his apparent defense of the traditional family. But as he explained in one of his books The Minimal Self, "it goes without saying that sexual equality in itself remains an eminently desirable objective...". Moreover, in Women and the Common Life, Lasch clarified that urging women to abandon the household and forcing them into a position of economic dependence, in the workplace, pointing out the importance of professional careers does not entail liberation, as long as these careers are governed by the requirements of corporate economy. He eventually concluded that an often unspoken but pervasive faith in "Progress" tended to make Americans resistant to many of his arguments. In his last major works he explored this theme in depth, suggesting that Americans had much to learn from the suppressed and misunderstood Populist and artisan movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Thomas Frank
Thomas Frank
Author · 13 books
Thomas Frank is the author of Pity the Billionaire, The Wrecking Crew, and What's the Matter with Kansas? A former columnist for The Wall Street Journal and Harper's, Frank is the founding editor of The Baffler and writes regularly for Salon. He lives outside Washington, D.C.
David Rieff
David Rieff
Author · 8 books
David Rieff is an American polemicist and pundit. His books have focused on issues of immigration, international conflict, and humanitarianism.
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