Chris Cutrone discusses his article “Socialist unity!” published in Sublation Magazine.
https://www.sublationmag.com/post/socialist-unity
In the second half, Doug Lain and Cutrone discuss revelations about the anti-Trump Russia collusion hoax.
Chris Cutrone discusses his article “Socialist unity!” published in Sublation Magazine.
https://www.sublationmag.com/post/socialist-unity
In the second half, Doug Lain and Cutrone discuss revelations about the anti-Trump Russia collusion hoax.
What is philosophy? What is history? What is capitalism? What does Marxism have to say about this? What about Trump?
Chris Cutrone and Douglas Lain discuss Cutrone’s article “What Musk and Trump still have in common,” published in Compact Magazine, July 8, 2025. In the second half, they discuss Cutrone’s essay “Beyond history? Nietzsche, Benjamin, Adorno.”
Chris Cutrone discusses the regressive character of the hoopla around Zohran Mamdani and explains how this is a repetition of the past failures of the Left. We are being asked to reinvest in a failed strategy once again. In the second half, Cutrone discusses Trump’s bombing of Iran and Benjamin’s philosophy of history.
Chris Cutrone interviewed by Erin Hagood on his book Marxism and Politics: Essays on Critical Theory and the Party 2006-2024 (2024), at Montez Press Radio in New York City, addressing the form and content of Marxism and writing, in light of the history of the Millennial Left.
Discussion at New York University by the producers and principal interviewers after a test screening of Sublation Media Douglas Lain’s documentary film The Last Election (2025), on the 2024 U.S. Presidential and general election through coverage of the major political party conventions and protests in Milwaukee and Chicago. Discussants include producers Chris Cutrone and Edward Remus, interviewers Benjamin Studebaker and Wyatt Verlen, and director Doug Lain.
Chris Cutrone and Doug Lain discuss the history of the Left and Iran.
Chris Cutrone explains why a socialist Left needs the Marxist as opposed to liberal conception of “Bonapartism.” In the second half, Lain and Cutrone discuss Walter Benjamin’s “The author as producer” (1934) and the relation between socialist politics and art and literature.