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The Baffler is an American magazine of cultural, political, and business analysis. Established in 1988 by editors Thomas Frank and Keith White, it was headquartered in Chicago , Illinois , until 2010, when it moved to Cambridge , Massachusetts .
Thomas Carr Frank (born March 21, 1965) is an American political analyst, historian, and journalist. He co-founded and edited The Baffler magazine. Frank is the author of the books What's the Matter with Kansas?
The Baffler is a quarterly magazine of art, poetry, and cultural and political criticism that was established in 1988 in Charlottsville, VA. Founder Thomas Frank has said The Baffler’s name began as “a joke spawned by ‘undecidability,’ a fad idea of the ’80s . . . in which a baffling sort of jargonese was much celebrated.
Wikia then began to assimilate independent fan wikis, such as Memory Alpha (a Star Trek fan wiki) and Wowpedia (a World of Warcraft fan wiki). [7] In the late 2010s—after Fandom and Gamepedia were acquired and consolidated by the private equity firm TPG Inc.—several wikis began to leave the service, including the RuneScape, Zelda, and ...
Angela Nagle (born 1984) [1] is an American-born Irish academic [2] and non-fiction writer who has written for The Baffler, [3] Jacobin, [4] and others. She is the author of the book Kill All Normies, published by Zero Books in 2017, which discusses the role of the internet in the rise of the alt-right and incel movements.
Anti-statism; Civil rights; Corporate governance; Counter-economics; Decentralization; Departurism; Deregulation; Economic liberalism; Evictionism; Free market
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Susan Charlotte Faludi (/ f ə ˈ l uː d i /; born April 18, 1959) is an American feminist, [1] [2] journalist, and author. She won a Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism in 1991, for a report on the leveraged buyout of Safeway Stores, Inc., a report that the Pulitzer Prize committee commended for depicting the "human costs of high finance".