First of the Year: 2010

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Akritas John
Al Aronowitz
American intellectual history
Arctic Fox
Avishai Bernard
Avnery Uri
Baraka Amiri
Beninga Sarah
Benj Demott
Beth Johnson Roxane
Blackburn Paul
Bredin John
Cambridge University
Category=DNT
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Cheshire Cat
Community Benefits Agreement
contemporary cultural criticism
Cornelius Castoriadis
D. Chuck
Demott Benj
Demott Tom
Di Prima Diane
Du Bois
East Jerusalem Neighborhood
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_fiction
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Estrellita Carmelita
Fr. Richard Frechette
Fr. Rick Frechette
Fredric Smoler
Free Women
Gaines Donna
Gelman Myers Judith
Greek Riots
Greene Eric
Hamiett Bluiett
Horowitz Irving Louis
Israeli High Court
Israeli Peace Movement
Kessler Ben
Lamborn Wilson Peter
Levin Bob
Liss David
Liss Robert
Mcclanahan Scott
Mclemee Scott
music and social change
Myers Dennis
O'Brien Charles
Obama's Cairo Speech
Obama’s Cairo Speech
Pink Man
Pop Star
radical imagination in modern politics
radical political theory
Rhodes Greg
right-wing media analysis
Sheikh Jarrah
Simmons'S Bill
Situationist philosophy
Smoler Fredric
Smucker Tom
South Hebron Hills
Spencer Scott
Super Hero
Ticking Bomb Scenario
Torres Richard
UK's Conservative Party
UK’s Conservative Party
UN
Uri Avnery
Waldstreicher David
West Philadelphia High School
White Armond
World Saxophone Quartet
Wurlitzer Rudolph
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138523616
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This is the third volume of the First of the Year annual series. Contributors such as Armond White, Philip Levine, Charles O'Brien, Uri Avnery, Donna Gaines, Tom Smucker, Scott Spencer, and Amiri Baraka are back (and fractious as ever). And First's family of writers keeps growing. This volume includes vital new voices such as A. B. Spellman, Bernard Avishai, Rudolph Wurlitzer, and Diane di Prima.

First never shies away from hot button issues Fredric Smoler, for example, offers a definitive consideration of America's recent history with torture. But First's approach to current political firestorms is often marked by a cool sense of the past. History is always in the mix when First writers examine the roots of Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin and contemporary right-wing pundits who falsely claim the mantle of Whittaker Chambers. First's refusal to toe "correct" lines is apparent in Benj DeMott's reconsideration of Chambers' work.

The new volume is also marked by its cultivation of radical imaginations. The ideas of the Situationists and Cornelius Castoriadis are revived. A young historian, David Waldstreicher, recovers the radical, useable past in the 60s work of Staughton Lynd. Amiri Baraka evokes the felt quality of Jesse Jackson's 1988 campaign and another poet remembers (in verse) long-forgotten, extreme political acts of American Renaissance poets.

A recent review of First of the Year: 2009 used a phrase of Kenneth Burke's "perspective by incongruity" to make sense of the method that shaped it. First is committed to thought-provoking incongruities. Faith that wonder is our best teacher informs this volume. First's music writing provides a high-low soundtrack of surprise. Beyond the section on Michael Jackson, there are serious responses to John Coltrane and Bach, World Saxophone Quartet and Mariah Carey, Sonny Rollins and Willie Mitchell. First's message is in the music.

Benj DeMott is a member of First of the Month Writers’ Collective. He lives with his wife and son, across the street from his brother in New York City