The Space Is the Place
On Abbey Road studios, the Beatles, and modern record production.
On Abbey Road studios, the Beatles, and modern record production.
Taylor Parkes The Quietus Mar 2012 20min Permalink
An investigation into slavery in Mauritania:
An estimated 10% to 20% of Mauritania’s 3.4 million people are enslaved — in “real slavery,” according to the United Nations’ special rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, Gulnara Shahinian. If that’s not unbelievable enough, consider that Mauritania was the last country in the world to abolish slavery. That happened in 1981, nearly 120 years after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in the United States. It wasn’t until five years ago, in 2007, that Mauritania passed a law that criminalized the act of owning another person. So far, only one case has been successfully prosecuted.
Edythe McNamee, John D. Sutter CNN Mar 2012 30min Permalink
The United States, which took a forceful stance on other Arab revolts, remained relatively passive in the face of the kingdom’s unrest and crackdown. To many who are familiar with the region, this came as no surprise: of all the Arab states that saw revolts last year, Bahrain is arguably the most closely tied to American strategic interests.
A report on Bahrain, the Arab Spring’s most ill-fated uprising.
Kelly McEvers Washington Monthly Mar 2012 50min Permalink
A report from the trial of Ivan Demjanjuk—a.k.a. “The Last Nazi”—who died on March 17.
Lawrence Douglas Harper's Mar 2012 Permalink
The French influence in Africa is on the wane, and the Chinese are coming.
Stephen W. Smith London Review of Books Feb 2010 20min Permalink
Sam Childers, a Pennsylvania-based evangelical preacher, biker, and former drug addict, has devoted his life to catching crazed African warlord Joseph Kony.
Ian Urbina Vanity Fair Apr 2010 25min Permalink
On a press junket in Ecuador, the author investigates the ethics of shopping.
Amanda Hess Good Mar 2012 Permalink
Why Greece has really failed.
Aristos Doxiadis Open Democracy Sep 2010 20min Permalink
All violence is not like all other violence. Every Jewish death is not like every other Jewish death. To believe otherwise is to revive the old typological thinking about Jewish history, according to which every enemy of the Jews is the same enemy, and there is only one war, and it is a war against extinction, and it is a timeless war.
Leon Wieseltier The New Republic May 2002 15min Permalink
The profile of a crime syndicate which dominates the European cocaine trade.
Andreas Ulrich Der Spiegel Jan 2012 20min Permalink
Dikembe Mutombo, humanitarian and former NBA center, and oil executive Kase Lawal arrange a ill-fated deal to buy $30 million in gold in Kenya.
Armin Rosen The Atlantic Mar 2012 20min Permalink
Putin v. Khodorkovsky:
Almost a decade ago, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, then the owner of the Yukos Oil Company and Russia’s richest man, completely miscalculated the consequences of standing up to Vladimir Putin, then Russia’s president. Putin had Khodorkovsky arrested, completely miscalculating the consequences of putting him in prison. During his eight years in confinement, Khodorkovsky has become Russia’s most trusted public figure and Putin’s biggest political liability. As long as Putin rules Russia and Khodorkovsky continues to act like Khodorkovsky, Khodorkovsky will remain in prison—and Putin will remain terrified of him.
Masha Gessen Vanity Fair Apr 2012 25min Permalink
Murder in the Juarez Valley:
A few weeks after Saul Reyes and his family fled Mexico, I drove to an immigrant shelter in downtown El Paso to see him. As the former city secretary of Guadalupe, Saul had once been in charge of recording the births and deaths of everyone in his hometown. He’d taken it upon himself now to collect every single name of those who had died or disappeared in Guadalupe since the killing began in 2008. Through media reports and meetings with the many valley exiles now living in Texas, Saul had compiled a list of the town’s dead and disappeared. Showing me the book, he turned page after page of names. So far he had counted 180 dead, 26 disappeared, and eight unknown bodies dumped in his small town of 3,000 people. “There are a lot more, but these are the ones I’ve been able to collect,” he said. In his careful, spidery script, he had written on one page the names of his six family members.
Melissa Del Bosque Texas Observer Feb 2012 35min Permalink
A Romanian-German novelist on being pursued by Ceaucescu’s secret police.
Herta Müller Die Zeit Aug 2009 25min Permalink
Gentrification and its discontents in Paris, throughout the centuries.
Eric Hazan New Left Review Apr 2010 Permalink
On the difficult challenges faced by an auteur in Nigeria’s burgeoning Nollywood film economy.
Andrew Rice New York Times Magazine Feb 2012 20min Permalink
In court and visiting prison with the parents of young Russian Nationalists who’ve killed.
Olesya Gerasimenko Open Democracy Feb 2012 Permalink
The lavish display and heavy drinking concealed the deadly serious North Caucasus politics of land, ethnicity, clan, and alliance.
In a cable brought to light by Wikileaks, the Ambassador to Russia describes a raucous three-day Dagestani wedding attended by Chechnya’s president Ramzan Kadyrov.
William Burns The Guardian Aug 2006 15min Permalink
The story of a young man on the run in the slum he dreams of escaping.
An essay on heritage, history and literature.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Feb 2012 25min Permalink
On Astana, the grandiose new capital that Kazakhstan built on the site of a remote Tsarist fort, and its striving young inhabitants.
John Lancaster National Geographic Feb 2012 10min Permalink
When 25-year-old Valentine Strasser seized power in Sierra Leone in 1992, he became the world’s youngest head of state. Today he lives with his mother and spends his days drinking gin by the roadside.
Simon Akam New Statesman Feb 2012 20min Permalink
Protests against the Putin regime are already drawing over 100,000 in sub-zero weather; what will they become when spring arrives?
Julia Ioffe Foreign Policy Feb 2012 10min Permalink
On the Balkan musical genre Turbo-Folk, its ties to Serbian ultranationalism, and the strongman nightclub owner who brought it to Croatia.
Matthieu Aikins Guernica Nov 2011 20min Permalink
Pavel Galitsky, 100 years old, blogger and Skyper, survivor of 15 years in Stalin’s Siberian Kolyma mines.
Ekaterina Loushnikova Open Democracy Apr 2011 15min Permalink