Tag Archives: n+1 Magazine

Literary Arts Preview: n+1 Magazine – Fall 2025

n+1 Magazine: The latest issue features ‘Force Majeure’ – New AI & I literature. Relate, revolt! Does Trump hate art? Idiocracy now. The new faces of ICE. Fiction by Elizabeth Schambelan.

Large Language Muddle

The AI upheaval is unique in its ability to metabolize any number of dread-inducing transformations. The university is becoming more corporate, more politically oppressive, and all but hostile to the humanities? Yes — and every student gets their own personal chatbot. The second coming of the Trump Administration has exposed the civic sclerosis of the US body politic? Time to turn the Social Security Administration over to Grok. Climate apocalypse now feels less like a distant terror than a fact of life? In five years, more than a fifth of global energy demand will come from data centers alone.

Two Days Talking to People Looking for Jobs at ICE

Naturally there were lots of law enforcement types hanging around the convention — men with military fades, moisture-wicking shirts, and tattoos of the Bible and the Constitution and eagles and flags distended across their arms. But there were also a handful of women ICE applicants and a lot of men of color. The deportation officer applicant pool was, I felt, shockingly diverse — one might say it looked like America. The whole place looked and felt like America.

Stupidology

The challenge posed by this political crisis is how to take the stupidity seriously without reducing it to a wholly mental or psychiatric, let alone genetic, phenomenon. Stupidity can be understood as a problem of social systems rather than individuals, as André Spicer and Mats Alvesson explore in their book The Stupidity Paradox. Stupidity, they write, can become “functional,” a feature of how organizations operate on a daily basis, obstructing ideas and intelligence despite the palpable negative consequences. Yet it’s hard to identify anything functional about Trumpian stupidity, which is less a form of organizational inertia or disarray than a slash-and-burn assault on the very things — universities, public health, market data — that help make the world intelligible.

Literary Arts Preview: n+1 Magazine – Winter 2025

@nplusonemag (December 4, 2024): The Winter 2025 issue of n+1, RERUN features:

Hannah Zeavin on psychoanalysis’s Palestine exception

Will Tavlin on Netflix’s assault on cinema

Mina Tavakoli attends a ventriloquism convention

Nicholas Dames reads books about parents reading books

Dawn Lundy Martin on falling in and out of love with the university

New fiction by Rachel KhongJill Crawford, and Claire Baglin

Bassem Saad on the afterlives of Mahdi Amel

Alan Dean on Radu Jude, Romania’s Godard

Mark Krotov on the return of Trump

Plus the intellectual situation: the editors on Fredric Jameson

Literary Preview: n+1 Magazine – Fall 2024

Image

@nplusonemag (August 16, 2024): The ‘Inside Job’ issue features Pope Fiction, My AI Could Paint That, Literal Death Drive, Raven Leilani on Grief Writing; Biden – A Retrospective and A Satire by Saidiya Hartman…

Literary Preview: n+1 Magazine – Spring 2024

Image

@nplusonemag (April 23, 2024): The latest issue features ‘Passage’ – Fast fashion nation. Six months of genocide in Gaza. Human_Fallback_2: 2 Human 2 Fallback. Martin Amis, re-reassessed. Border stories by Nicholas Hamburger and Paul Soto.

Who Sees Gaza?

A genocide in images



OCTOBER 7 MARKED the beginning of a new economy of war imagery. At first there was a video of a bulldozer plowing through the border fence between Israel and Gaza—an astonishing image, captured in a familiar way. Then things turned horribly surreal. The events of that day were beamed to the world in real time via body-cam, dashcam, cell phone, drone. A Hamas fighter wearing a GoPro stalked the highway with his automatic rifle jutting up from the bottom of the frame, first-person-shooter style. A dashboard camera showed a car zooming forward as a bullet pierced its windshield and the car began to drift, veering left, until it crashed into the rear end of a parked Toyota; you knew exactly when the person behind the wheel could no longer drive, was probably dead. 

Literary Previews: n+1 Magazine – Winter 2023

Image

@nplusonemag Winter 2023 issue features new writing by: + Laura Preston + Victoria Lomasko + @CharoShane + Laura Kolbe + Blair McClendon (@__seab) + @nicoleklipman + Su Wu + hannah baer + @haleymlotek + Thomas Bolt + Stephen Squibb + @JudithLevine +@gabrielwinant.