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Real Review 7

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Real Review 7

Real Review 7

Real Review is a quarterly contemporary culture magazine with the strapline “what it means to live today”. Our agenda focuses on the politics of space, and trying to understand how everyday conditions enforce and reinforce power relations.

You've been privatised, pathologised, indebted and exploited. Civil society is disintegrating, and hard-won freedoms are being undone. Yet from this maelstrom has emerged an intense clarity: a desire for sobriety, self-control, altruism, generosity, and the pursuit of mental and physical wellbeing. We are more aware, informed, engaged, and alert to social injustices – particularly of race, gender and geography. We are woke.

But is this miraculous awakening to structural inequalities true or merely tokenistic? Is wokeness a fad, or a systemic, generational shift in social ethos?

Why are some white people scared of a Black Planet? Real Review interviews Reni Eddo-Lodge to find out. Meanwhile, Buckminster Fuller reviews God, and Alice Barker reviews algorithmic profiling. Should some artworks be forbidden? Jack Self reviews the degenerate art of Emile Nolde. Spanish architect Anna Puigjaner reviews the kitchenless apartment, Paola Antonelli reviews tamagotchis and modernity, and much more. 

90-100 pages, softcover, 26 x 11.5 cm, Real Review (London)

$35.31
Real Review 7
$35.31

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Real Review is a quarterly contemporary culture magazine with the strapline “what it means to live today”. Our agenda focuses on the politics of space, and trying to understand how everyday conditions enforce and reinforce power relations.

You've been privatised, pathologised, indebted and exploited. Civil society is disintegrating, and hard-won freedoms are being undone. Yet from this maelstrom has emerged an intense clarity: a desire for sobriety, self-control, altruism, generosity, and the pursuit of mental and physical wellbeing. We are more aware, informed, engaged, and alert to social injustices – particularly of race, gender and geography. We are woke.

But is this miraculous awakening to structural inequalities true or merely tokenistic? Is wokeness a fad, or a systemic, generational shift in social ethos?

Why are some white people scared of a Black Planet? Real Review interviews Reni Eddo-Lodge to find out. Meanwhile, Buckminster Fuller reviews God, and Alice Barker reviews algorithmic profiling. Should some artworks be forbidden? Jack Self reviews the degenerate art of Emile Nolde. Spanish architect Anna Puigjaner reviews the kitchenless apartment, Paola Antonelli reviews tamagotchis and modernity, and much more. 

90-100 pages, softcover, 26 x 11.5 cm, Real Review (London)

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