The real test for Leo’s ‘new Republic’ – Limerick Leader

I CANT get my head around Leo Varadkars brand new Republic, the place where prejudice has no hold. Of course I welcome it, but at the same time, I cant wait to test it, which means, in essence, that I havent much faith in it. Anyway, Im not even sure if Im ready for it yet.

Im full of prejudices, fears and phobias myself, and only last night I had a nightmare that the Irish language lobby was having me committed to Mountjoy for racism after I had once again questioned the policy of making it a compulsory subject for every Leaving Cert student apart from those whose parents had the money to be able to provide evidence of a learning difficulty that applied only to Irish.

Neither can I shake off the feeling of deep prejudice that I have been harbouring for years against the likes of highly paid hospital consultants who virtually dictate the effectiveness or otherwise of the HSE, and who include their childrens nannies on their staff payrolls to cut their tax bills. Am I going to have to clasp them to my bosom now lest they flee abroad and leave us all without access to open heart surgery?

Even as I write, this new non-judgemental Republic is seething with prejudice against social welfare recipients who have to prove that they are not cheats or parasites, while the richest among us draw down the Childrens Allowance and the free travel and dont have to prove anything. The Taoiseach in waiting had best watch out in case he gets infected with this prejudice, because he already seems to have diverted most of his old Social Welfare staff to fraud detection, while mothers about to give birth have to wait six weeks for their badly needed maternity benefits. Look, we either have a Welfare State or a Republic that holds no prejudice, and I know which one Id prefer.

Now dont even get me started on priests and nuns. If the so called non-judgemental secularists of the new Republic had their way, the clergy would be obliterated with even more ferocity than Henry VIII could ever have mustered against the Monasteries. An innocent priest is vilified on Prime Time and an innocent nun is jailed on hearsay evidence and, because of our prejudices, we dont even bat an eyelid at the injustice. We may have managed to dump some of our nastier phobias, but now weve developed an even more malevolent one Christophobia, a fear of Christianity.

Most people in this country are Christians and why any of us have to lie down and have our religious beliefs disrespected the way they are in some quarters is beyond me.

Im telling you now, if we dont stand up to the new visionaries, well have to bring back the Mass rocks and head for the glens and mountains to practice our Faith, or risk being burned at the stake.

Ive had my problems with individual priests and nuns all my life, but generally I found them nothing but a force for good and I cant even imagine the hurt people like Sr Stan, who devoted her life to helping the poor and the homeless, are now enduring.

But of course, if you really want to experience what its like to be the butt of prejudice in this grand new Republic, all you have to do is grow old and listen to someone asking you when youre going to throw in the towel and make way for a younger person.

For despite all the lip service paid to the venerable elderly, were not as valued as older people once were and were fair game for second rate comedians. Maybe its because there are more of us now, and our numbers are likely to swell even further in the years ahead.

Were a growing demography with serious implications for the economy and the health service, and the real test of Leos new Republic, for us anyway, is whether anyone will have the gall to tell us to our faces that weve become a burden.

It wouldnt, of course, be the first time we declared a Republic where every person and every child would be cherished equally.

But it wasnt long before we had lost the plot and, in the end, we even lost the run of ourselves. But this is different. This is a place where even tolerance with its unfortunate connotations of them and us is considered a dirty word. Weve moved on from all that, it seems, and there is no going back?

Forgive me for being cynical but its hardly two years since the wealthy and influential citizens of South County Dublin - where apparently the seeds of this new Utopia of equality were sown behind electronically gated entrances - successfully resisted plans to have a travellers halting site planked in their midst. I dont know what inspired them if it wasnt prejudice of some kind, but Im sure theyve overcome the intolerance by now.

Maybe Id have been better prepared for this brave new world if I had done what everyone told me to do a long time ago and moved with the times. But I didnt.

So here I am, full, no doubt, of old loyalties, but a Neanderthal at heart with Neanderthal opinions that should never be dismissed as prejudices. For I believe wholeheartedly in equality, and Im not sure that everyone else does, because according to the late lamented Sean O Faolain, the notion of equality is not really in our genes, and that may yet rebound on Leos vision.

The Irish, OFaolain declared, had an ineradicable love of individual liberty. Equality, as far as I could see, they never bothered about, he admitted.

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The real test for Leo's 'new Republic' - Limerick Leader

Macron’s parliamentary election win is good news for France – Washington Examiner

On Sunday, President Emmanuel Macron's party won big in the French parliamentary elections.

While the second and final round of voting (for candidates who received at least 12.5 percent in the first round) will take place this coming Sunday, it should be a formality.

After all, the first round results indicate Macron's La Republique En Marche (LREM) Party is likely to win a huge majority.

And I do mean huge.

Analysts believe Macron will win between 415 and 445 seats in France's lower house, the National Assembly. With only 577 seats available, that result would give Macron a 126-seat majority. In France's system of government, the National Assembly is far more important than the French Senate. Controlling the lower house would thus give Macron the means to push through the boldest possible reforms.

That's good news for France.

Macron is no conservative, but neither is he a socialist. Instead, the president is a realist. He recognizes that France's economy needs an injection of innovation and competition. And he's promising to shake up the nation's labor laws so that businesses find it easier to hire the best workers, and fire the worst.

Such reform is fundamental to France's future prosperity. Yet for years, various French governments have either been unwilling or unable to take on the unions who oppose reform. Now that may change. With the new Parliament scheduled to sit on June 27, Macron's majority means we should expect action in short order.

Speaking to Washington Examiner, Benjamin Haddad, a Hudson Institute scholar, outlined Macron's top three priorities.

"The first priority, by far, is reforming the labor market. President Macron wants to go fast here, with Parliament giving him authority to use executive orders to expedite the process. Second, Macron will institute a training program to boost the skills of unemployed workers. Third, he plans to reform the European Union with a specific focus on the Eurozone."

Yet none of this will be easy.

For one, many sectors of the French economy are held captive to powerful interest groups who believe older workers deserve protection against firing. This means that businesses are often unable to hire aspirational young workers and instead are forced to employ unproductive workers. As I've explained, this scandal of anti-youth regulation typifies the supposed utopia of European socialism. As he pares back the power of these interest groups, Macron will face street protests.

Macron will also have to push the notoriously stubborn German Chancellor Angela Merkel to shake up the European Union. That organization is wasteful, undemocratic, and in desperate need of an overhaul. Macron knows reform is needed in order to prevent future Brexit-style separations.

Regardless, Macron's electoral win on Sunday should be seen as good news. The Fifth Republic need actions. And now, for the first time, its government stands poised to deliver.

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Macron's parliamentary election win is good news for France - Washington Examiner

Briefs: Utah Foundation, PECO, Utopia, Inc., PRMI, rural housing – Salt Lake Tribune

He praised Kroes and his staff for building "a remarkable legacy."

The foundation also hired Samantha Brucker, who has a background in environmental and energy affairs and water resources, as a research analyst and made Shawn Teigen a vice president and research director with responsibilities for the office's day-to-day management.

PECO Real Estate, Almanac Realty to form retail-focused company

Park City-based PECO Real Estate Partners said it has received a $300 million commitment from Almanac Realty Investors to form a retail-focused company called PREP Property Group.

The investment by New York City-based Almanac will enable PREP to grow its business of "repositioning undermanaged, capital-starved, poorly merchandised or distressed" malls and other commercial retail centers.

Michael Phillips will be president and CEO of PREP, which spun out of Phillips Edison and Co.'s former development and strategic divisions. It has expertise in every aspect of retail shopping center operation and management, added chief operating officer Sara Brennan.

Founded in 1981 as Rothschild Realty, Almanac said it has invested $4.4 billion in 39 companies in North America.

Utopia Fiber moves to Murray, will add interactive demo space

The Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency, better known as Utopia Fiber, has moved its offices to 5858 S. 900 East in Murray. This summer, the fiber optic network will add an interactive demo space to showcase the bandwidth capabilities of its system, said Executive Director Robert Timmerman.

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Briefs: Utah Foundation, PECO, Utopia, Inc., PRMI, rural housing - Salt Lake Tribune

Let’s break down the incredible Black Panther trailer – The Verge

The first teaser trailer for Black Panther is finally here, and it looks incredible. If there was ever any doubt about how Black Panther, one of Marvels more enigmatic and under-appreciated superheroes, would fare on the big screen, this two-minute spot should put those fears to rest. Theres political intrigue, a sci-fi utopia, and plenty of action to look forward to, with a largely black cast put right on center stage.

But more than being just generally entertaining, this trailer is dense. Director Ryan Coogler has clearly done his homework on Black Panther lore, pulling in threads and ideas from some of the characters best stories over his 50 year history. Lets break some of them down.

Potential spoilers ahead.

Right off the bat, it should strike you that a movie trailer about the first black superhero in mainstream comics opens on a meeting between two white characters. Thats almost certainly by design. Weve met both of these characters before and they provide a window into a world that has been a complete mystery to us and the Marvel Cinematic Universe up until now.

Lets start with Everett K. Ross, played by Martin Freeman. He was first introduced in a minor role in last years Captain America: Civil War, but hell play a major part in this film as TChallas (Chadwick Boseman) key American ally. His role pulls directly from Christopher Priests classic 1998 Black Panther run, where Ross is a hapless government agent assigned to keep an eye on TChalla during a diplomatic crisis. Just like in the comics, he initially knows little about Wakanda. But is he ever going to learn.

Across from him is the one-armed Ulysses Klaw (Andy Serkis), a traditional Black Panther villain who was first introduced onscreen back in Avengers: Age of Ultron. Hes a gangster and smuggler whos been trying to steal Vibranium the metal Black Panthers suit is made of from Wakanda, the hyper-advanced African nation where TChalla is set to rule as king. Hes likely a pivotal figure in the unrest TChalla will have to face as ruler.

The crux of the film looks like itll have to do with TChalla returning to Wakanda to claim the throne. His father, King TChaka, was killed in Civil War, so its now up to TChalla to rule and deal with the drama that comes with his new duties.

Its from his point of view that we really see Wakanda for the first time. The first place we see is Warrior Falls, where his coronation will take place.

This gives us a peek at how Coogler has envisioned Wakanda for the film: a techno-utopia that features both futuristic airships and traditional culture. Its beautiful to behold, but also hints at how complicated life in the country is. TChalla will have to balance his responsibilities as a monarch with his life as a superhero, and thats going to be a difficult task. King TChaka (John Kani) even returns to do voiceover in the second half of the trailer, intoning, You are a good man with a good heart. And its hard for a good man to be king.

A major challenge for TChalla will be the factions vying for supremacy in Wakanda, a theme writer Ta-Nehisi Coates touched on in his recent run in the comics. Wakanda has numerous tribes across its numerous regions with varying levels of influence, even though the Black Panther is the leader of the entire country. One powerful figure among those tribes is Man-Ape (Winston Duke), another Panther villain who appears late in the trailer.

However, the core villain looks like it might be NJadaka, otherwise known as Erik Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan). Killmonger, who first appeared way back in Don McGregors epic 1970s Jungle Action comic run, is a Wakandan exile who holds a powerful grudge against TChallas father. Hes the mental and physical equal of the Black Panther in the comics, and once even managed to best TChalla in combat at Warrior Falls.

Some of Wakandas most powerful figures, both in the comics and in this trailer, are women. The most visible ones are the Dora Milaje, Black Panthers royal guard and traditionally his wive-in-training. They all kick ass. Theres Ayo, played by Florence Kasumba and first seen in Civil War. (You might also recognize her from Wonder Woman, where she played the Amazon Senator Acantha.) She doesnt play around. In the comics, she even helped lead a revolution against Black Panther himself.

Theres Okoye, played by The Walking Deads Danai Gurira, the leader of the Dora Milaje. And theres Nakia, played by Lupita Nyongo. Nakia fell deeply in love with TChalla in the comics, and her obsession with him eventually made her an enemy. Well see where Coogler takes their story in the film.

Even beyond the Dora Milaje, the royal family is sure to be formidable. Angela Bassett plays Queen Mother Ramonda, and even though we see her briefly, shes sure to play an important supporting role to TChalla. And then theres Princess Shuri (Letitia Wright). First introduced in Reginald Hudlins Black Panther run in 2005, shes TChallas kid sister. She eventually goes on to become a Black Panther and Queen of Wakanda, but thats probably a ways off.

One more thing. That purple blast before we see Black Panther flip off a destroyed car almost certainly comes from his suit, meaning well get the chance to see what he can really do. The vibranium armor TChalla wears is arguably as advanced as Tony Starks Iron Man armor, only with the emphasis put on stealth and agility instead of flight. With it, he can fire powerful energy blasts, scale buildings, and take gunfire without so much as blinking an eye.

Theres so much more that we still dont know about whats to come for this movie. (Which is good! Trailers really shouldnt give everything away!) But theres plenty to be excited about, particularly for new and long-time Black Panther fans.

Black Panther hits theaters on February 16th.

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Let's break down the incredible Black Panther trailer - The Verge

MAVI Museum of Visual Arts – E-Flux

Arturo Duclos El fantasma de la utopa Utopias Ghost June 8August 20, 2017

MAVI Museum of Visual Arts Mulato Gil de Castro Square Jos Victorino Lastarria 307 Santiago Chile

http://www.mavi.cl Twitter

Arturo Duclos: el fantasma de la utopa [Utopias Ghost] Curator: Paco Barragn

Is the idea of utopia still necessary, let alone possible? Is utopia still valid as aspiration for a better or even perfect society? Or has utopia simply turned into nostalgia and a kind of new kitsch?

The exhibition Arturo Duclos: el fantasma de la utopia [Utopias Ghost]at the Museo de Artes Visuales (MAVI) in Santiago de Chile tackles these fascinating issues by reflecting on the major revolutionary movements of Latin America that tried to impose by force a more just society: Tupamaros, EZLN, FARC, Sendero Luminoso, M-19, MIR, 26 de Julio, FPMR, MRTA and FSLN.

Utopia as nostalgia Arturo Duclos, one of the younger members of the Chilean avant-garde, the so-called Escena de Avanzada, has always been interested in the idea of utopia and, particularly, in the inherent ambiguity that underlies the construction of utopia by Thomas Moore, and how this ambiguity has been sufficiently strong to accelerate history by means of battles, movements and revolutions.

Departing from the symbolism and iconography of the flags of these revolutionary movements, Duclos confronts the spectator in a thought-provoking way not only with ideals associated to the spirit of liberation, messianism and social utopia, but the exhibition also establishes fruitful connections with the fate of the many recent leftist populist governments that have existed in Latin America during the last 20 years: from Chvez, Kirchner, Morales, Correa and Lula to Mujica.

Never has mankind known such a period of stability and prosperity, but at the same timeas Thomas Piketty has keenly shown usnever has there been so much inequality in the world. So, if the unpredictable future is no longer a place for utopia then it seems to be safe to look into the malleable past for possible answers. It also allows us to conclude that todays utopian spirit is imbued with great dosis of nostalgia.

Utopia as kitsch With an interdisciplinary approach that covers diverse forms, from sculpture, drawing, installation and painting to video and performance, Arturo Duclos: el fantasma de la utopia [Utopias Ghost] presents five thematic constellationsBanderas/Flags, Caporales, Escudos de armas/Coats of Arms, Memorabilia and Machina Anemicaas well as Cuartel General/Headquarters, a public tent that will function as a mediation point for the public during the length of the exhibit.

Utopia as the new kitsch? Kitsch as utopian? These seemingly contradicting concepts run into each other more than we are willing to admit. And in this sense, in many of these works Duclos interacts and challenges, both from a conceptual and a formal point of view, the idea of kitsch understood as a saturation of concepts, colors and forms.

I was always interested, affirms Arturo Duclos, in reading these configurations that proceed from the popular culture unconscious and that take the place in these paramilitary groups with a hierarchic regime based upon the religious dance groups.

With regards to the conceptualization and design of the exhibition, curator Paco Barragn explains that We are very well aware of the tenacious Alfred Barrs ideology that persists in modern and contemporary art museums, and for this reason we conceived several Stimmungsrume in order to create a more challenging context for the spectator than the aseptic and anemic white-cube walls would allow.

Both avant-gardes and revolutions have become parodies subjected to postcapitalism.

Now, the question, according to Arturo Duclos, would be: What can we do in order to reanimate utopia?

This exhibition has been generously sponsored by the Chilean National Fund for the Development of Culture and the Arts-FONDART through its 2017 open call.

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MAVI Museum of Visual Arts - E-Flux

World-famous author has found his writing utopia outdoors, under a tarp, in Davis – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
World-famous author has found his writing utopia outdoors, under a tarp, in Davis
Sacramento Bee
His latest novel, New York 2140 (Orbit, $28, 624 pages), submerges Manhattan under 55 feet of water, the result of a century-plus of melting ice caps and severe climate change. He chose 2140 as the year because that's how long he speculates it would ...

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World-famous author has found his writing utopia outdoors, under a tarp, in Davis - Sacramento Bee

NEXUS pipeline revved and waiting – News – Times Reporter – New … – New Philadelphia Times Reporter

Project could still hit year-end service target if FERC gives approval soon.

NORTH CANTON The stalled NEXUS Gas Transmission project still could be completed before year's end, but federal regulators would have to approve the pipeline soon to meet that target.

"We've got that race car sitting there revved and all ready to go, we just need that go ahead," NEXUS President James Grech said Wednesday during theUtica Capital Midstream Seminar at Walsh University.

NEXUS was one of several pipeline projects discussed at the conference hosted by the Canton Regional Chamber of Commerce and ShaleDirectories.com.

NEXUS is a proposed 36-inch-diameter interstate natural gas pipeline. The $2.1 billion project would cross eastern and northern Stark County and the city of Green in Summit County and carry natural gas from the Utica and Marcellus shales to users in Ohio, Michigan, Canada and other Midwestern markets.

Detroit-based DTE Energy and Spectra Energy, which merged this year with Calgary-based Enbridge, are partners in the project.

NEXUS had expected the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to approve the project earlier this year and to have the pipeline in service during the fourth quarter.

That didn't happen before one of FERC's three commissioners resigned in February, leaving the commission without a quorum and stalling the project. The term of another commissioner ends June 30.

"We were waiting until the last minute to see if we got our certificate, and obviously we didn't get it, but we feel pretty good about our prospects once FERC has its quorum back in getting approved," Grech said.

FERC nominees

That quorum could arrive soon.

On Tuesday, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committeesent President Donald J. Trump's two FERC nominees Robert Powelson and Neil Chatterjee to the full Senate for a vote.

Powelson is a member of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission. Chatterjee is a senior energy adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky.

Federal bureaucracy isn't the only obstacle for NEXUS, however.

The Coalition to Reroute NEXUS (CORN) landowner group, with support from the city of Green, took FERC and NEXUS to court in May, asking a federal judge to bar FERC from approving the project.

CORN alleged that FERC's review of the project was arbitrary and failed to account for safety issues. The case is pending.

NEXUS also would need to find workers to build the pipeline at a time when other projects, such as Energy Transfer's Rover Pipeline are under construction.

Grech said contractors have assured NEXUS they will have the needed workers to build the pipeline.

Project spokesman Adam Parker said NEXUS would follow all safety and environmental guidelines in trying to meet the year-end target.

"We pride ourselves on that and feel it sets us apart from others," Parker said.

Utopia underway

Conference attendees also heard an update on Kinder Morgan's Utopia Pipeline.

Utopia is a 12-inch-diameter pipeline designed to carry natural gas liquids, such as ethane or an ethane-propane mix, roughly 215 miles from Harrison County to Fulton County for shipment to Canada.

The $540 million pipeline is under construction and should be in service in January, said Allen Fore, Kinder Morgan's vice president of public affairs.

Utopia's route crosses southwestern Stark County and parts of Tuscarawas and Carroll counties.

Reach Shane at 330-580-8338 or shane.hoover@cantonrep.com

On Twitter:@shooverREP

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NEXUS pipeline revved and waiting - News - Times Reporter - New ... - New Philadelphia Times Reporter

Introduction: Open Utopia | The Open Utopia

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Today we are people who know better, and thats both a wonderful and terrible thing.

Sam Green, Utopia in Four Movements,

Utopia is a hard sell in the twenty-first century. Today we are people who know better, and what we know are the horrors of actually existing Utopias of the previous century: Nazi Germany, Stalins Soviet Union, Maoist China, and so on in depressing repetition. In each case there was a radical break with the present and a bold leap toward an imagined future; in every case the result was disastrous in terms of human cost. Thankfully, what seems to be equally consistent is that these Utopias were relatively short-lived. History, therefore, appears to prove two things: one, Utopias, once politically realized, are staggering in their brutality; and two, they are destined to fail. Not exactly a ringing endorsement.

Yet we need Utopia more than ever. We live in a time without alternatives, at the end of history as Frances Fukuyama would have it, when neoliberal capitalism reins triumphant and uncontested. There are still aberrations: radical Islam in the East, neo-fascist xenophobia in the West, and a smattering of socialist societies struggling around the globe, but by and large the only game in town is the global free market. In itself this might not be so bad, except for the increasingly obvious fact that the system is not working, not for most people and not most of the time. Income inequality has increased dramatically both between and within nations. National autonomy has become subservient to the imperatives of global economic institutions, and federal, state, and local governance are undermined by the protected power of money. Profit-driven industrialization and the headlong rush toward universal consumerism is hastening the ecological destruction of the planet. In short: the world is a mess. Opinion polls, street protests, and volatile voting patterns demonstrate widespread dissatisfaction with the current system, but the popular response so far has largely been limited to the angry outcry of No! No to dictators, No to corruption, No to finance capital, No to the one percent who control everything. But negation, by itself, affects nothing. The dominant system dominates not because people agree with it; it rules because we are convinced there is no alternative.

Utopia offers us a glimpse of an alternative. Utopia, broadly conceived, is an image of a world not yet in existence that is different from and better than the world we inhabit now. For the revolutionary, Utopia offers a goal to reach and a vision to be realized. For the reformer, it provides a compass point to determine what direction to move toward and a measuring stick to determine how far one has come. Utopia is politically necessary even for those who do not desire an alternative society at all. Thoughtful politics depend upon debate and without someone or something to disagree with there is no meaningful dialogue, only an echo chamber. Utopia offers this other, an interlocutor with which to argue, thereby clarifying and strengthening your own ideas and ideals (even if they lead to the conclusion that Utopia is undesirable). Without a vision of an alternative future, we can only look backwards nostalgically to the past, or unthinkingly maintain what we have, mired in the unholy apocalypse that is now. Politically, we need Utopia.

Yet there are theoretical as well as practical problems with the project. Even before the disastrous realizations of Utopia in the twentieth century, the notion of an idealized society was attacked by both radicals and conservatives. From the Left, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels famously criticized Utopians for ignoring the material conditions of the present in favor of fantasies of a futurean approach, in their estimation, that was bound to result in ungrounded and ineffectual political programs, a reactionary retreat to an idealized past, and to inevitable failure and political disenchantment. Ultimately, they wrote in The Communist Manifesto, when stubborn facts had dispersed all intoxicating effects of self-deception, this form of socialism end[s] in a miserable fit of the blues. That is to say, the high of Utopia leads, inevitably, to the crushing low of a hangover. From the Right, Edmund Burke disparaged the Utopianism of the French Revolution for refusing to take into account the realities of human nature and the accumulated wisdom of long-seated traditions. With some justification, Burke felt that such leaps into the unknown could only lead to chaos and barbarism. Diametrically opposed in nearly every other facet of political ideology, these lions of the Left and Right could agree on one thing: Utopia was a bad idea.

Between the two poles of the political spectrum, for those in the center who simply hold on to the ideal of democracy, Utopia can also be problematic. Democracy is a system in which ordinary people determine, directly or through representation, the system that governs the society they live within. Utopias, however, are usually the products of singular imaginations or, at best, the plans of a small group: a political vanguard or artistic avant-garde. Utopians too often consider people as organic material to be shaped, not as willful agents who do the shaping; the role of the populace is, at best, to conform to a plan of a world already delivered complete. Considered a different way, Utopia is a closed program in which action is circumscribed by an algorithm coded by the master programmer. In this program there is no space for the citizen hacker. This is one reason why large-scale Utopias, made manifest, are so horrific and short-lived: short-lived because people tend not to be so pliable, and therefore insist on upsetting the perfect plans for living; horrific because people are made pliable and forced to fit the plans made for them. In Utopia the demos is designed, not consulted.

It is precisely the imaginative quality of Utopiathat is, the singular dream of a phantasmagorical alternativethat seems to damn the project to nave impracticality as an ideal and megalomaniac brutality in its realization. But without political illusions, with what are we left? Disillusion, and its attendant discursive practice: criticism. Earnest, ironic, sly or bombastic; analytic, artistic, textual, or performative; criticism has become the predominant political practice of intellectuals, artists, and even activists who are dissatisfied with the world of the present, and ostensibly desire something new. Criticism is also Utopias antithesis. If Utopianism is the act of imagining what is new, criticism, derived from the Greek words kritikos (to judge) and perhaps more revealing, krinein (to separate or divide), is the practice of pulling apart, examining, and judging that which already exists.

One of the political advantages of criticismand one of the reasons why it has become the preferred mode of political discourse in the wake of twentieth-century Utopian totalitarianismis that it guards against the monstrous horrors of political idealism put into practice. If Utopianism is about sweeping plans, criticism is about pointed objections. The act of criticism continually undermines any attempt to project a perfect system. Indeed, the very act of criticism is a strike against perfection: implicitly, it insists that there is always more to be done. Criticism also asks for input from others. It presupposes a dialogue between the critic and who or what they are criticizingor,ideally, a conversation amongst many people, each with their own opinion. And because the need to criticize is never-ending (one can always criticize the criticism itself), politics remains fluid and open: a permanent revolution. This idea and ideal of an endless critical conversation is at the center of democratic politics, for once the conversation stops we are left with a monolithic ideal, and the only politics that is left is policing: ensuring obedience and drawing the lines between those who are part of the brave new world and those who are not. This policing is the essence of totalitarianism, and over the last century the good fight against systems of oppression, be they fascist, communist or capitalist, has been waged with ruthless criticism.

But criticism has run its political course. What was once a potent weapon against totalitarianism has become an empty ritual, ineffectual at best and self-delusional at worst. What happened? History. The power of criticism is based on two assumptions: first, that there is an intrinsic power and worth in knowing or revealing the Truth; and second, that in order to reveal the Truth, beliefoften based in superstition, propaganda, and liesmust be debunked. Both these assumptions, however, have been undermined by recent material and ideological changes.

The idea that there is a power in knowing the Truth is an old one. As the Bible tells us in the Gospel of John (8:31-33) And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. What constituted the truth at that time was hardly the empirical fact of todayit was what we might call the supreme imaginary of the Word of God, communicated through the teachings of Jesus Christ. Nonetheless, these are the seeds of an idea and ideal that knowing the answer to lifes mysteries is an intrinsic good. As I have argued elsewhere, this faith in the power of the Truth is integral to all modern political thought and liberal-democratic politics, but it is given one of its purest popular expressions in Hans Christian Andersons 1837 tale The Emperors New Clothes. The story, as you may recall from your childhood, is about an emperor who is tricked into buying a spectacular suit of non-existent clothing by a pair of charlatans posing as tailors. Eager to show it off, the Emperor parades through town in the buff as the crowd admires his imaginary attire. Then, from the sidelines, a young boy cries out: But he has nothing on, and, upon hearing this undeniable fact, the people whisper it mouth to ear, awaken from their illusion, and live happily ever after. Is this not the primal fantasy of all criticsthat if they just revealed the Truth, the scales will fall from peoples eyes and all will see the world as it really is? (Which, of course, is the world as the critic sees it.)

There was once a certain logic to this faith in the power of the possession of Truthor, through criticism, the revealing of a lie. Within an information economy where there is a scarcity of knowledge, and often a monopoly on its production and distribution, knowledge does equal power. To criticize the official Truth was to strike a blow at the church or states monopoly over meaning. Critique was a decidedly political act, and the amount of effort spent by church and state in acts of censorship suggests its political efficacy. But we do not exist in this world anymore. We live in what philosopher Jean-Franois Lyotard named the postmodern condition, marked by the death of the master narrative in which Truth (or the not so Noble Lie) no longer speaks in one voice or resides in one location.

The postmodern condition, once merely an academic hypothesis pondered by an intellectual elite, is now, in the Internet age, the lived experience of the multitude. On any social or political issue there are hundreds, thousands and even millions of truths being claimed. There are currently 1 trillion unique URLs on the World Wide Web, accessed by 2 billion Google searches a day. There are more than 70 million videos posted on YouTube, and about 30 billion tweets have been sent. The worldwide count of blogs alone exceeds 130 million, each with a personalized perspective and most making idiosyncratic claims. Even the great modern gatekeepers of the TruthBBC, CNN and other objective news outletshave been forced to include user-generated content and comment boards on their sites, with the result that no singular fact or opinion stands alone or remains unchallenged.

It was the great Enlightenment invention of the Encyclopedia that democratized Truthbut only in relation to its reception. Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia with its 3.5 million-and-counting entries in English alone has democratized the production of truths. This process is not something hidden, but part of the presentation itself. Each Wikipedia page is headed by a series of tabs that, when clicked, display the encyclopedia entry, public discussion about the definition provided, the history of the entrys production, and a final tab: edit this page, where a reader has the chance to become a (co)producer of knowledge by editing and rewriting the original entry. In Wikipedia the Truth is transformed from something that is into something that is becoming: built, transformed, and revised; never stable and always fluid: truth with a small t.

Todays informational economy is no longer one of monopoly or scarcityit is an abundance of truthand of critique. When power is wielded through a monopoly on Truth, then a critical assault makes a certain political sense, but singularity has now been replaced by plurality. There is no longer a communications citadel to be attacked and silenced, only an endless plain of chatter, and the idea of criticizing a solitary Truth, or swapping one for the otherthe Emperor wears clothes/the Emperor wears no clotheshas become increasingly meaningless. As the objects of criticism multiply, criticisms power and effect directly diminishes.

Criticism is also contingent upon belief. We often think of belief as that which is immune to critique. It is the individual or group that is absolutely confidentreligious fundamentalists in todays world, or totalitarian communists or fascists of the last century; that is, those who possess what we call blind belief, which criticism can not touch. This is not so, for it is only for those who truly believe that criticism still matters. Criticism threatens to undermine the very foundation of existence for those who build their lives on the edifice of belief. To question, and thus entertain doubt, undermines the certainty necessary for thoroughgoing belief. This is why those with such fervent beliefs are so hell-bent on suppressing their critics.

But can one say, in most of the world today, that anyone consciously believes in the system? Look, for instance, at the citizens of the United States and their opinions about their economic system. In 2009, the major US pollster Rasmussen Reports stated that only a marginal majority of Americans 53 percent believe that capitalism is a better system than Socialism. This finding was mirrored by a poll conducted a year later by the widely respected Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, in which only 52 percent of Americans expressed a favorable opinion of capitalism. Just a reminder: these polls were taken after the fall of the Soviet Union and the capitalist transformation of China, in a country with no anti-capitalist party, where the mass media lauds the free market and suggests no alternatives, and where anti-communism was raised to an art form. This lack of faith in the dominant system of capitalism is mirrored worldwide. A BBC World Service poll, also from 2009, found that across twenty-seven (capitalist) countries, only 11 percent of the public thought free-market capitalism was working well. Asked if they thought that capitalism is fatally flawed and a different economic system is needed, 23 percent of the 29,000 people surveyed answered in the affirmative, with the proportion of discontents growing to 35 percent in Brazil, 38 percent in Mexico and 43 percent in France.

My anti-capitalist friends are thrilled with these reports. Surely were waiting for the Great Leap Forward. I hate to remind them, however, that if the system is firmly in control, it no longer needs belief: it functions on routineand the absence of imagination. That is to say, when ideology becomes truly hegemonic, you no longer need to believe. The reigning ideology is everything: the sun, the moon, the stars; there is simply nothing outsideno alternativeto imagine. Citizens no longer need to believe in or desire capitalism in order to go along with it, and dissatisfaction with the system, as long as it is leveled as a critique of the system rather than providing an alternative, matters little. Indeed, criticism of neoliberal capitalism is a part of the system itselfnot as healthy check on power as many critics might like to believe, but as a demonstration of the sort of plurality necessary in a democratic age for complete hegemonic control.

I am reminded of the massive protests that flooded the streets before the US invasion of Iraq. On February 15, 2003 more than a million people marched in New York City, while nearly 10 million demonstrated worldwide. What was the response of then president George W. Bush? He calmly and publicly acknowledged the mass demonstration as a sign that the system was working, saying, Democracys a beautiful thing people are allowed to express their opinion, and I welcome peoples right to say what they believe. This was spin and reframing, but it got at a fundamental truth. Bush needed the protest to make his case for a war of (Western) freedom and liberty vesus (Arab) repression and intolerance. Ironically, he also needed the protest to legitimize the war itself. In the modern imagination real wars always have dissent; now that Bush had a protest he had a genuine war. Although it pains me to admit this, especially as I helped organize the demonstration in New York, anti-war protest and critique has become an integral part of war.

When a system no longer needs to base its legitimacy on the conscious belief of its subjects indeed, no longer has to legitimize itself at allthe critical move to debunk belief by revealing it as something based on lies no longer retains its intended political effect. This perspective is not universally recognized, as is confirmed by a quick perusal of oppositional periodicals, be they liberal or conservative. In each venue there will be criticisms of official truth and the positing of counter-truths. In each there exist a thousand young boys yelling out: But he has no clothes! To no avail. The de-bunking of belief may continue for eternity as a tired and impotent ritual of political subjectivitysomething to make us think and feel as if we are really challenging powerbut its importance and efficacy is nil.

Dystopia, Utopias doppelganger, speaks directly to the crisis in belief, for dystopias conjure up a world in which no one wants to believe. Like Utopias, dystopias are an image of an alternative world, but here the similarities end. Dystopian imaginaries, while positing a scenario set in the future, always return to the present with a critical impulsesuggesting what must be curtailed if the world is not to end up the way it is portrayed. Dystopia is therefore less an imagination of what might be than a revealing of the hidden logic of what already is. Confronted with a vision of our horrific future, dystopias audience is supposed to see the Truththat our present course is leading us to the rocks of disasterand, having woken up, now act. Dystopic faith in revelation and the power of the (hidden) truth makes common cause with traditional criticism and suffers the same liabilities.

Furthermore, the political response generated by dystopia is always is a conservative one: stop the so-called progress of civilization in its course and and what? Where do we go from here? We do not know because we have neither been offered a vision of a world to hope for nor encouraged to believe that things could get better. In this way dystopias, even as they are often products of fertile imagination, deter imagination in others. The two options presented to the audience are either to accept the dystopic future as it is represented, or turn back to the present and keep this future from happening. In neither case is there a place for imagining a desirable alternative.

Finally, the desire encouraged through dystopic spectatorship is perverse. We seem to derive great satisfaction from vicariously experiencing our world destroyed by totalitarian politics, rapacious capitalism, runaway technology or ecological disaster, and dystopic scenarios1984, Brave New World, Blade Runner, The Day After Tomorrow, The Matrix, 2012have proved far more popular in our times than any comparable Utopic text. Contemplating the haunting beauty of dystopic art, like Robert Graves and Didier Madoc-Joness recent London Futures show at the Museum of London in which the capital of England lies serenely under seven meters of water, brings to mind the famous phrase of Walter Benjamin, that our self-alienation has reached such a degree that it can experience its own destruction as an aesthetic pleasure of the first order.While such dystopic visions are, no doubt, sincerely created to instigate collective action, I suspect what they really inspire is a sort of solitary satisfaction in hopelessness. In recent years a new word has entered our vocabulary to describe this very effect: disasterbation.

So here we are, stuck between the Devil and the deep blue sea, with a decision to make. Either we drift about, leveling critiques with no critical effect and reveling in images of our impending destructionliving a life of political bad faith as we desire to make a difference yet dontor we approach the Devil. It is not much of a choice. If we want to change the world we need to abandon the political project of pure criticism and strike out in a new direction. That is, we need to make our peace with Utopia. This cannot happen by pretending that Utopias demons do not existcreating a Utopia of Utopia; instead it means candidly acknowledging the problems with Utopia, and then deciding whether the ideal is still salvageable. This revaluation is essential, as it is one thing to conclude that criticism is politically impotent, but quite another to suggest that, in the long shadow of its horrors, we resurrect the project of Utopianism.

Today we are people who know better, and thats both a wonderful and terrible thing. When Sam Green presents this line in his performance of Utopia in Four Movements it is meant as a sort of a lament that our knowledge of Utopias horrors cannot allow us ever again to have such grand dreams. This knowledge is wonderful in that there will be no large-scale atrocities in the name of idealism; it is terrible in that we no longer have the capacity to envision an alternative. But we neednt be so pessimistic; perhaps knowing better offers us a perspective from which we can re-examine and re-approach the idea and ideal of Utopia. Knowing better allows us to ask questions that are essential if Utopia is to be a viable political project.

The paramount question, I believe, is whether or not Utopia can be opened upto criticism, to participation, to modification, and to re-creation. It is only a Utopia like this that will be resistant to the ills that have plagued the project: its elite envisioning, its single-minded execution, and its unyielding manifestation. An Open Utopia that is democratic in its conception and protean in its realization gives us a chance to escape the nightmare of history and start imagining anew.

Another question must also be addressed: How is Utopia to come about? Utopia as a philosophical ideal or a literary text entails no input other than that of its author, and no commitment other than time and interest on the part of its readers; but Utopia as the basis of an alternative society requires the participation of its population. In the past people were forced to accept plans for an alternative society, but this is the past we are trying to escape. If we reject the anti-democratic, politics-from-above model that has haunted past Utopias, can the public be persuaded to ponder such radical alternatives themselves? In short, now that we are people who know better, can we be convinced to give Utopia another chance?

These are vexing questions. Their answers, however, have been there all along, from the very beginning, in Thomas Mores Utopia.

When More wrote Utopia in the early sixteenth century he was not the first writer to have imagined a better world. The author owed a heavy literary debt to Platos Republic wherein Socrates lays out his blueprint for a just society. But he was also influenced by the political and social imaginings of classic authors like Plutarch, Sallust, Tacitus, Cicero and Seneca, with all of whom an erudite Renaissance Humanist like More would have been on intimate terms. The ideal of a far-off land operating according to foreign, and often alluring, principles was also a stock-in-trade in the tales of travel popular at the time. The travelogues of Sir John Mandeville were bestsellers (albeit amongst a limited literate class) in the fourteenth century, and adventurers tales, like those of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth-century explorer Amerigo Vespucci, were familiar to More. Most important, the Biblethe master-text of Mores European homeprovided images of mythical-historical lands flowing with milk and honey, and glimpses of a world beyond where the lion lays down with the lamb.

By the time More sat down to write his book, envisioning alternative worlds was a well-worn literary tradition, nut Utopia literally named the practice. One need not have read his book, nor even know that such a book exists, to be familiar with the word, and Utopia has entered the popular lexicon to represent almost any positive ideal of a society. But, given how commonly the word is used and how widely it is applied, Utopia is an exceedingly curious book, and much less straightforward than one might think.

Utopia is actually two books, written separately and published together in 1516 (along with a great deal of ancillary material: maps, marginalia, and dedications contributed by members of the Renaissance Europes literary establishment). Book I is the story of More meeting and entering into a discussion with the traveler Raphael Hythloday; Book II is Hythlodays description of the land to which he has traveledthe Isle of Utopia. Scholars disagree about exactly how much of Book I was in Mores mind when he wrote Book II, but all agree that Book II was written first in 1515 while the author was waiting around on a futile diplomatic mission in the Netherlands, and Book I was written a year later in his home in London. Chronology of creation aside, the reader of Utopia encounters Book I before Book II, so this is how we too shall start.

Book I of Utopia opens with More introducing himself as a character and taking on the role of narrator. He tells the reader that he has been sent to Flanders on a diplomatic mission for the king of England, and introduces us to his friend Peter Giles, who is living in Antwerp. All this is based in fact: More was sent on such a mission by Henry VIII in 1515 and Peter Giles, in addition to being the authors friend, was a well-known Flemish literary figure. Soon, however, More mixes fiction into his facts by describing a meeting with Raphael Hythloday, a stranger, who seemed past the flower of his age; his face was tanned, he had a long beard, and his cloak was hanging carelessly about him, so that, by his looks and habit, I concluded he was a seaman. While the description is vivid and matter-of-fact, there are hints that this might not be the type of voyager who solely navigates the material plane. Giles explains to More that Hythloday has not sailed as a seaman, but as a traveler, or rather a philosopher. Yet it is revealed a few lines later that the (fictional) traveler has been in the company of the (factual) explorer Amerigo Vespucci, whose party he left to venture off and discover the (fictional) Island of Utopia. This promiscuous mix of reality and fantasy sets the tone for Utopia. From the beginning we, the readers, are thrown off balance: Who and what should we take seriously?

Returning to the story: introductions are made, and the three men strike up a conversation. The discussion turns to Mores native country, and Hythloday describes a (fictional) dinner conversation at the home of (the factual) John Morton, Catholic Cardinal, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Lord Chancellor of England, on the harsh laws of England which, at the time, condemned persons to death for the most minor of crimes. At the dinner party Hythloday assumes the role of critic, arguing against such laws in particular and the death penalty in general. He begins by insisting that crime must be understood and addressed at a societal level. Inheritance laws, for instance, leave all heirs but the first son property-less, and thus financially desperate. Standing armies and frequent wars result in the presence of violent and restless soldiers, who move easily into crime; and the enclosure of once common lands forces commoners to criminal measures to supplement their livelihood. Hythloday then finds a fault in juridical logic. Enforcing the death penalty for minor crimes, he points out, only encourages major ones, as the petty thief might as well kill their victim as have them survive as a possible witness. Turning his attention upward, Hythloday then claims that capital punishment is hubris against the Divine, for only God has the right to take a human life. Having thus argued for a sense of justice grounded on earth as well as in the heavens, he concludes: If you do not find a remedy to these evils it is a vain thing to boast of the severity in punishing theft, which, though it might have the appearance of justice, yet in itself is neither just nor convenient. It is a blistering critique and a persuasive performance.

The crowd around the archbishops dinner table, however, is not persuaded. A lawyer present immediately replies with a pedantic non-reply that merely sums up Hythlodays arguments. A fool makes a foolish suggestion, trolling only for laughs. And a Friar, the butt of the fools jokes, becomes indignant and begins quoting scripture willy-nilly to justify his outrage, engaging in tit-for-tat with the fool and thus derailing the discussion entirely. The only person Hythloday seems to reach is Morton, who adds his own ideas about the proper treatment of vagabonds. But this thoughtful contribution, too, is devalued when the company assembledmotivated not by logic but by sycophancyslavishly agree with the archbishop. As a Socratic dialogue, a model More no doubt had in mind, the dinner party discussion bombs. Hythloday convinces no one with his logic, fails to engage all but one of his interlocutors, and moves us no closer to the Platonic ideal of Justice. In short, Hythloday, as a critic, is ineffectual.

And not for the only time. Hythloday makes another critical intervention later in Book I, this time making his case directly to More and Giles. Here the topic is private property, which Hythloday believes to be at the root of all societys ills, crime included. I must freely own, he reasons, that as long as there is any property, and while money is the standard of all other things, I cannot think that a nation can be governed either justly or happily Alas, while Hythloday has convinced himself, he is the only one, for there are no ears for his thoughts. More immediately counters with the oft-heard argument that without property to gain and inequality as a spur, humans will become lazy, and Giles responds with a proto-Burkean defense of tradition. Again, Hythlodays attempts at critical persuasion fail.

Hythloday concludes that critical engagement is pointless. And when More suggests that he, with his broad experience and strong opinions, become a court counselor, Hythloday dismisses the idea. Europeans, he argues, are resistant to new ideas. Princes are deaf to philosophy and are more concerned with making war than hearing ideals for peace. And courts are filled with men who admire only their own ideas and are envious of others. More, himself unconvinced by Hythloday up until now, finally agrees with him. One is never to offer propositions or advice that we are certain will not be entertained, he concurs, adding that, Discourses so much out of the road could not avail anything, nor have any effect on men whose minds were prepossessed with different sentiments.

But More does not counsel despair and disengagementhe suggests an alternative strategy of persuasion. The problem is not with Hythlodays arguments themselves, but with the form in which he presents them. One cannot simply present radical ideas that challenge peoples basic assumptions about the world in the form of a reasoned argument, for no one wants to be told they are wrong. There is another philosophy, More explains, that is more pliable, that knows its proper scene, [and] accommodates itself to it. He goes on to use the example of drama, explaining how an actor must adapt to the language and the setting of the play if his lines are to make sense to the audience. If the drama is a light comedy, More explains, then it makes little sense to play ones part as if it were a serious tragedy, For you spoil and corrupt the play that is in hand when you mix with it things of an opposite nature, even though they are much better. Therefore, he continues, go through the play that is acting the best you can, and do not confound it because another that is pleasanter comes into your thoughts.

More makes it clear that his dramaturgical advice is meant to be taken politically. He tells Hythloday: You are not obliged to assault people with discourses that are out of their road when you see that their received notions must prevent your making an impression on them. Instead, he counsels, you ought rather to cast about and to manage things with all the dexterity in your power. This time, however, it is Hythlodays turn to be unswayed by argument. He interprets Mores proposal as an invitation to dissemble and rejects it forthwith: as for lying, whether a philosopher can do it or not I cannot tell: I am sure I cannot do it.

This revealing exchange may be understood in several ways. The most common reading among Utopiascholars is that Mores advice to Hythloday is an argument for working within the system, to go through with the play that is acting the best you can, and to abandon a confrontational style of criticism in favor of another philosophy that is more pliable, that knows its proper scene, [and] accommodates itself. To be successful, More seems to counsel, one must cast oneself within the play that is acting, that is, the status quo, and accommodate ones ideas to the dominant discourse. Shortly before writing Utopia, More had been asked by Henry VIII to enter his service as a counselor and he was still contemplating the offer while at work on the book. It is thus easy to imagine this whole discussion as a debate of sorts within his own head. Mores conclusionthat to be effective one needs to put aside the high-minded posturing of the critic and embrace the pliability of politicscan be understood as an early rationalization for his own decision to join the Kings council two years later, in 1518. (A decision that was literally to cost the man his head in 1535, when hehigh-mindedlyrefused to bless Henry VIIIs divorce and split from the Catholic Church). Another popular interpretation of this passage proposes that More is merely trotting out the standard classical arguments in defense of the practice of rhetoric: know your audience, cater to their preferences, and so forth. Hythloday, in turn, gives the classic rebuttal: the Truth is fixed and eternal. It is the debate between Aristotle in the Rhetoric and Plato in Gorgias, retold.

While not discounting either of these interpretations, I want to suggest another: that Morethe character and the authoris making a case for the political futility of direct criticism. What he calls for in its place is a technique of persuasion that circumvents the obstacles that Hythloday describes: tradition, narrow-mindedness, and a simple resistance on the part of the interlocutor to being told what to think. More knows that, while the critic may be correct, their criticism can often fall on deaf earsas it did in all of Hythlodays attempts. What is needed is another model of political discourse; not rhetoric with its moral relativity, nor simply altering ones opinions so they are acceptable to those in power, but something else entirely. Where is this alternative to be found? Answering this question entails taking Mores dramatic metaphor seriously.

The plays the thing. What drama doesis create a counter-world to the here and now. Plays fashion a space and place which can look and feel like reality yet is not beholden to its limitations, it is, literally, a stage on which imagination becomes reality. A successful play, according to the Aristotelian logic with which More would have been familiar, is one in which the audience loses themselves in the drama: its world becomes theirs. The world of the play is experienced and internalized and thus, to a certain degree and for a limited amount of time, naturalized. The alternative becomes the norm. Whereas alternatives presented through criticism are often experienced by the audience as external to the dominant logic, as discourses that are out of their road, the same arguments advanced within the alternative reality of the play become the dominant logic. Importantly, this logic is not merely approached cognitively, as set of abstract precepts, but experienced viscerally, albeit vicariously, as a set of principles put into practice.

What works on the stage might also serve in the stateroom. By presenting views at odds with the norm the critic begins at a disadvantage; he or she is the perpetual outsider, always operating from the margins, trying to convince people that what they know as the Truth might be false, and what they hold to be reality is just one perspective among many. This marginal position not only renders persuasion more difficult but, paradoxically, reinforces the centrality of the norm. The margins, by very definition, are bound to the center, and the critic, in their act of criticism, re-inscribes the importance of the world they take issue with. Compared to the critic, the courtier has an easier time of it. The courtier, as a yes man, operates within the boundaries of accepted reality. They neednt make reasoned appeals to the intellect at all, they merely restate the obvious: what is already felt, known and experienced. The courtier has no interest in offering an alternative or even providing genuine advice; their function is merely to reinforce the status quo.

Casting about, or the indirect approach as it is elsewhere translated, provides More with a third position that transcends critic and courtierone that allows an individual to offer critical advice without being confined to the margins. Instead of countering reality as the critic does, or accepting a reality already given like the courtier, this person creates their own reality. This individuallet us call them an artistconjures up a full-blown lifeworld that operates according to a different axioms. Like Hamlet staging the murder of his father before an audience of the court and the eyes of his treacherous uncle, the artist maneuvers the spectator into a position where they see their world in a new light. The persuasive advantages of this strategy should be obvious. Instead of being the outsider convincing people that what they know to be right is wrong, the artist creates a new context for what is right and lets people experience it for themselves. Instead of negating reality, they create a new one. No longer an outsider, this artist occupies the center stage in their own creation, imagining and then describing a place where their ideals already exist, and then inviting their audience to experience it with them. Book I a damning critique of direct criticismends with this more hopeful hint at an alternative model of persuasion. Book II is Mores demonstration of this technique; his political artistry in practice.

The second book of Utopia begins with Raphael Hythloday taking over the role of narrator and, like the first book, opens with a detailed description of the setting in order to situate the reader. Unlike the real Flanders described by More in Book I, however, the location that Hythloday depicts is a purely imaginary space:

The island of Utopia is in the middle two hundred miles broad, and holds almost at the same breadth over a great part of it, but it grows narrower towards both ends. Its figure is not unlike a crescent. Between its horns the sea comes in eleven miles broad, and spreads itself into a great bay, which is environed with land to the compass of about five hundred miles, and is well secured from winds. In this bay there is no great current; the whole coast is, as it were, one continued harbor, which gives all that live in the island great convenience for mutual commerce.

Like the coordinates of the Garden of Edenlocated at the mythical juncture of the real rivers of Pison, Gihon, Hiddekel and the Euphratesthis description lends a physical veracity to what is a fantasy, a technique that More will employ throughout. After this physical description of the island, Hythloday begins his almost encyclopedic account of the customs and constitution of Utopia. Highlights include: an elected government and priesthood, freedom of speech and religion, public health and education, an economy planned for the good of all, compassionate justice and little crime, and perhaps most Utopian of all, no lawyers: a sort of people whose profession it is to disguise matters and wrest the laws.

The people who populate Utopia are kind and generous, and shoulder their responsibility for the general welfare as the natural order of things. They always have work, yet also enjoy a great deal of leisure which they spend in discussion, music, or attending public lectures (alas, gambling, beer halls, and wine bars are unknown in Utopia). There is ideological indoctrination, to be sure, but even this is idealized: the Utopians begin each communal meal with a reading on a moral topic, but it is so short that it is not tedious. The various cities of Utopia function in harmony with one another, and if one district has a surplus of crops or other goods, these are redirected towards cities which have a deficit, so that indeed the whole island is, as it were, one family.

At the root of Utopia, the source from which everything grows, is the community of property. The quality of this society is best described thus:

[E]very house has both a door to the street and a back door to the garden. Their doors have all two leaves, which, as they are easily opened, so they shut of their own accord; and, there being no property among them, every man may freely enter into any house whatsoever.

For though no man has any thing, yet they are all rich.

Utopia is Mores sixteenth-century Europe turned upside-down. This inversion of the real is best illustrated in one of the few anecdotes that Hythloday narratesa visit to the island by a group of foreign ambassadors. The Anemolians, as they are called, had never traveled to Utopia before, and were unfamiliar with the local customs. [T]hey, being a vainglorious rather than a wise people, resolved to set themselves out with so much pomp that they should look like gods, and strike the eyes of the poor Utopians with their splendor. Dressed for success, the Anemolian ambassadors wear cloth made from gold and drape heavy gold chains around their necks, while gold rings adorn their fingers and strings of gems and pearls hang from their caps. But in Utopia, Hythloday tells us, such wealth and finery signify differently. Gold is what the chains and shackles of slaves are made from, and jewels are considered childrens playthings: pretty to look at, but valued much as marbles or dolls are by us. Utopians craft their dinnerware from everyday clay and glass, saving their gold and silver to fashion implements for another part of the nutritional process: chamber pots. (O magnificent debasement of gold! is written in the marginalia at this point in the text. ) Ignorant of the Utopians as they are, the Anemolian ambassadors make their public appearance bedecked in their finery. The Utopians, confused, bow to the humblest and most simply dressed of the Anemolian party and ignore the leaders, who they believe to be slaves. In a moment anticipating The Emperors New Clothes, a child, spying the ambassadors, calls out to his mother: See that great fool, that wears pearls and gems as if he were yet a child! To which the mother answers: Hold your peace! This, I believe, is one of the ambassadors fools.

This anecdote, along with the rest of Hythlodays description of Utopia in Book II, does what Hythloday in Book I cannot: it presents the world of the Utopians in such a way that the reader confronts these radical ideas as the norm to which their own world is an aberration. More, through Hythloday, thereby moves the margins into the center, and forces skeptics into the margins; the alternative occupies center stage. In a word, More naturalizes his imagined Utopia.

At various points throughout Book II, Hythloday comments upon the contextuality of the natural. The Utopians share the same days, months and years as the books audience, as these are rooted in physical laws of the universe, but man is a changeable creature, as Hythloday asserts, and the behavior of the Utopians is the result of their societys beliefs and institutions. Indeed, the idea that the social can shape the natural extends even to animals: at one point Hythloday explains how the Utopians use artificial incubation to hatch their chicks, and they are no sooner out of the shell, and able to stir about, but they seem to consider those [humans] that feed them as their mothers, and follow them as other chickens do the hen that hatched them.

If there is little crime in Utopia, it is not because the Utopians are inherently more law-abiding, but because there is a rational criminal justice system at work and no private property to be gained or lost in theft. Hythloday makes the same argument about crime and private property as he does in Book I, but in Book II he is more persuasive (at least, no one interrupts to tell him he is wrong) because he shows the world as it might be instead of telling people what is wrong with the world as it is. Through the imaginative space of Utopia, More has assembled a new context for his readers to approach old, seemingly intractable social problems and imagine new solutions.

But what sort of a space is this? As many know, Utopia is a made-up word composed by More from the Greek words ou (not) and topos (place). It is a space which is, literally, no place. Furthermore, the storyteller of this magic land is named Raphael Hythloday, or Hythlodaeus in the Latin in which More wrote. The root of this surname is the Greek huthlos, a word used frequently by Plato, meaning nonsense or idle talk. So here we are, being told the story of a place which is named out of existence, by a narrator who is named as unreliable. And these are just two of the countless paradoxes, enigmas and jokes scattered throughout the text. And so begins the big debate among Utopia scholars: Is the entirety of Mores Utopia a satire, an exercise demonstrating the absurdity of proposing political, social and economic alternatives to the status quo? Or is this story of an idyllic society an earnest effort to suggest and promote such ideals?

There is suggestive evidence for Mores sincerity. More is at pains to lend a sense of veracity to the story. He very clearly situates it within the context of his ownverifiabletrip to Flanders in 1515, and scatters the names of well-known contemporaries throughout the book: Peter Giles, Archbishop Morton, Amerigo Vespucci, an others. As you will remember, More provides painstakingly detailed descriptions of Utopia, beginning with Hythlodays description of the landscape of the island. The first printings of Utopia contained an illustrated map of the nation, and Giles, Mores friend and fellow witness to Hythlodays tale, supplied an Utopian alphabet.

Again and again More goes out of his way to try to persuade his readers that Utopia is a real place. In a prefatory letter from More to Giles, also included in the first editions, More asks his friend for help in remembering the exact length of a bridge that Hythloday mentions in his description, for while his job as author was a simple oneonly to rehearse those things which you and I together heard Master Raphael tell and declareand there remained no other thing for me to do but only write plainly the matter as I heard it spoken, he humbly admits his memory may be in doubt. More remembers hearing that the bridge was half a mile, or 500 paces long, but fears he might be in error, because he also recalls the river contains there not above three hundred paces in breadth. More wants to get his facts right. Yes, such suggestions of facticity were a common literary device at the time, yet they also add a veneer of veracity to the entire account. Mores memory might be faulty, but the place which he is remembering is undeniably real. As More comments to Giles in the same letter, I shall take good heed that there be in my book nothing false, so if there be anything in doubt I will rather tell a lie than make a lie, because I had rather be good than wise [wily]. Why would More expend so much effort making a case for the actual existence of a place like Utopia if he did not want it to be taken seriously by his audience?

While it stretches credulity to suggest that More expected his audience to fully to believe that Utopia is real, it is reasonable to argue that he uses fantasy to articulate political, economic and religious alternatives he really believes in. For instance, Hythloday mentions in Book II that the Utopians, when told about Christianity, approved of the religion as it seemed so favorable to that community of goods, which is an opinion so particular as was well as so dear to them; since they perceived that Christ and His followers lived by that rule. More, a devout Christian who once studied for the priesthood and would later give his life to honor his beliefs, had every reason to be sincere about the community of goods described in Utopia. Given who he was and what he believed, it is exceedingly difficult to imagine More satirizing Jesus and his followers.

The surname of the narrator of Utopia, Hythloday, may translate out as speaker of nonsense, but his Christian name, Raphael, finds its genesis in the Archangel Raphael, who gives sight to the blind. As such, Raphael Hythloday might therefore be recognized as a guide to help the reader see a greater truth. What obvious absurdities Utopia does containchamber pots made of precious metals, for examplecould be understood as a way to throw into sharp relief the corruptions of contemporary Christendom. Less charitably, such silliness could be seen as a sort of political cover for airing heretical political and religious views. By salting his tale with absurdities More can suggest these radical ideas yet at the same time politically distance himself from them. He has his cake and eats it too.

To sum up this perspective: More was serious about Utopia. He was earnest in his appreciation of the manners, customs, and laws of the Utopians, and used realism in order to convey a sense of genuine possibility. Just as the number of cities in Utopia matches the number of counties in England and Wales in Mores time, Utopia was meant to be experienced by the reader as a valid alternative to the real world in which they lived.

On the other hand, there is also evidence that More meant his Utopia to be read as a satire. In recent years, revisionist Utopiascholars have claimed that. far from being a sincere vision of the society we ought to have, the author used his imagined island as an extended argument for why such utopian visions are, literally, a joke. In addition to the destabilizing names given to the place and the narrator, More, in his description of the island of Utopia, makes attractive possibilities that hegiven his personal, economic, political, and religious position in lifewould be expected to be dead set against. He was a man, lawyer, property holder, future kings councilor, Lord Chancellor, and dogmatic defender of the faith, yet the island he describes has female equality, communal property, democratic governance, religious freedom, and no lawyers. This seems quite a contradiction. Indeed, in his later life More penned works attacking the very religious tolerance extolled in Utopia, and as Lord Chancellor, a position he attained in 1529, he investigated religious dissenters and presided over the burning at the stake of a half-dozen prominent Protestant heretics. In this light, Mores conscious use of the absurd in Utopia can be interpreted as undercutting the radical ideas advanced in his book, and the silliness of many of the customs and characteristics of Utopia taint any such idea of an ideal society. By inserting a political vision of an ideal world within a society that also uses chamber pots made of gold and silver, for instance, More effectively ridicules all political idealization.

More was a devout Christian, but (with his friend Erasmus) he was also a translator of the second-century Greek writer Lucian, a man known for his satirical and skeptical dialogues, and Utopia is stuffed with erudite irony that calls into question the sincerity of the story. For example, at one point Hythloday recalls how, in European and other Christian countries, political treaties and alliances are religiously observed as sacred and inviolable! Which is partly owing to the justice and goodness of the princes themselves, and partly to the reverence they pay to the popes. This sentence works in the book because Mores audience knows that the exact opposite is true: alliances and treaties were routinely broken by both church and state, and princes and popes were frequently neither just nor good. Given this, how are we to take anything that Hythloday says at face value?

The detailed descriptions of Utopian landmarks that give the account its sense of realism are likewise undermined by Mores use of humor. In the same prefatory letter to his friend Giles, in which he worries that he might not have his facts straight about the length of a bridge, More arrives at a solution to his dilemma: Wherefore, I most earnestly desire you, friend Peter, to talk with Hythloday, if you can face to face, or else write letters to him, and so to work in this matter that in this, my book, there may be neither anything be found that is untrue, neither anything be lacking which is true. The humor here comes in the realization that Hythloday will never contradict anything More writes, because Hythloday simply does not exist; there will be no fact-checking of Utopia because there is no one to contact to check the facts. An equally silly explanation for the impossibility of pinpointing Utopia on a world map is given by his friend Peter Giles who, in another letter appended to the early printings of Utopia, apologizes for the absence of coordinates by explaining that, at the exact moment that Hythloday was conveying the location to More and himself, someone nearby coughed loudly (!) and the travelers words were lost.

In his ancillary letters More takes issue with his contemporaries who claim that Utopia is just a farce, but his arguments are themselves farcical. In a letter attached to the 1517 edition, he defends the facticity of his account, explaining to his friend Giles that, if Utopia were merely fiction, he would have had the wit and sense to offer clues to tip off his learned audience. Thus, he states,

if I had put nothing but the names of prince, river, city and island such as might suggest to the learned that the island was nowhere, the city a phantom, the river without water, and the prince without a people, this would not have been hard to do, and would have been much wittier than what I did; for if the faithfulness of an historian had not been binding on me, I am not so stupid as to have preferred to use those barbarous and meaningless names, Utopia, Anyder, Amaurot and Ademus.

The irony here, which the knowing reader would certainly get, is that this is exactly what More has done: Utopia, the name of the island, means nowhere; Amaurot, the Utopian city described, means phantom, and so on. How are we to take More seriously?

Approaching Utopia ironically changes the meaning of Mores words, and what seemed sincere now appears sarcastic. When More comments to Giles that, I shall take good heed that there be in my book nothing false, so if there be anything in doubt I will rather tell a lie than make a lie, it is not an earnest declaration of his search for the truth, but a sly acknowledgement that he may be telling the reader a lie. The tokens of veracity I describe above the debate over the bridge, the Utopian alphabet, the maps and so forth far from being evidence for Mores sincerity, can be seen from this perspective as supporting materials for one big prank.

Further evidence that Utopia was meant to be understood as an erudite prank can be found in the ancillary material contributed by Mores friends. In a letter from Jerome de Busleyden to More, Busleyden praises Utopia, especially as it withholds itself from the many, and only imparts itself to the few. In other words, only the learned few will get the joke. This interpretation is reinforced by another letter included along with the text, this one from Utopia publisher Beatus Rhenanus to the wealthy humanist (and adviser to Emperor Maximillain on literary matters) Willibald Pirckheimer. After describing how one man, among a gathering of a number of serious men, argued that More deserved no credit for Utopia as he was no more than a paid scribe for Hythloday, Rhenanus switches from Latin to the even more rarefied Greek to write: Do you not, then, welcome this very cleverness of Moore, who leads such men as these astray?

Within the book, the character of More himself is not even convinced that what Hythloday has related is real. When, at the very end of Book II, More returns to the text as narrator, he tells the reader: When Raphael had thus made an end of speaking many things occurred to me, both concerning the manners and laws of that people, that seemed very absurd. More then lists a few of these absurdities: the Utopians manner of waging war, their religious practices, but chiefly, he states, what seemed the foundation of all the rest, their living in common, without the use of money, by which all nobility, magnificence, splendor, and majesty, which, according to the common opinion, are the true ornaments of a nation, would be quite taken away. In having More (the character) remain unconvinced at the end of Hythlodays story, More (the writer) seems to be rejecting not only the political vision of Utopia, but also the mode of persuasion that he suggested to Raphael in Book I. Utopia is indeed No-Place.

But there are more than two sides to the story of Utopia. While good arguments for both the satirical and sincere interpretations of the text can be made, I believe this binary debate obfuscates rather than clarifies the meaning of Mores work, and actually misses the political genius of Utopia entirely. The brilliance of Mores Utopia is that is it simultaneously satirical and sincere, absurd and earnest, and it is through the combination of these seemingly opposite ways of presenting ideals that a more fruitful way of thinking about political imagination can start to take shape. It is the presentation of Utopia as no place, and its narrator as nonsense, that creates a space for the readers imagination to wonder what an alternative someplace might be, and what a radically different sensibility might be like. In enabling this dialectical operation, Utopia opens up Utopia, encouraging the reader to imagine for themselves.

Mores second letter to his co-conspirator Peter Giles, which appears only in the 1517 edition, hints that this open reading of Utopia is what he hoped to provoke. The letter begins with More writing about an anonymous (and possibly invented) clever person who has read his text and offers the following criticism: [I]f the facts are reported as true, I see some absurdities in them; but if fictitious, I find Mores finished judgment in some respects wanting. More then goes on to write about this sharp-eyed critic that by his frank criticism he has obliged me more than anyone else since the appearance of the book. What to make of this curious criticism and Mores appreciation of it?

I believe it is this ideal readers refusal to wholly to accept Utopia as fact, yet also his dissatisfaction with the story as a good fiction, that obliges More. It is exactly because this reader positions Utopia between fact and fiction, and is not satisfied with either reading, that he is such a clever person. Yet this person, clever as he may be, is an accidental good reader; he wants Utopia to be one or the other, either fact or fiction, a sincere rendering of an actual land or a satirical send-up of an imaginary place. Now, when he questions whether Utopia is real or fictitious, More complains, I find his finished judgment wanting. It is the or in the first clause that is the problem here. Written in the tradition of serio ludere, or serious play that More admired so much in classic authors, the story is both fact and fiction, sincere and satirical. Utopia is someplace and no-place.

Utopia cannot be realized, because it is unrealistic. It is, after all, no place. Yet Utopias presentationnot only its copious claims towards facticity, but the very realism of the descriptionsgives the reader a world to imagine; that is, it is also some-place. It this works as springboard for imagination. More is not telling us simply to think about a different social order (Hythloday, as you will remember, tries this in Book I and fails) but instead conjures up a vision for us, drawing us into the alternative through characters, scenes, and settings in this phantasmagoric far-off land. We do not imagine an alternative abstractly, but inhabit it concretely, albeit vicariously. Upon their meeting, More (the character) begs Hythloday to describe in detail the wonderful world to which he has traveled, and asks him to set out in order all things relating to their soil, their rivers, their towns, their people, their manners, constitution laws, and, in a word, all that you can imagine we desire to know. More (the author/artist) then complies to his own request. Through Utopia we are presented with a world wholly formed, like an architects model or a designers prototype. We experience a sense of radical alterity as we step inside of it and try it on for size. For the time of the tales telling, we live in Utopia, its landscape seeming familiar and its customs becoming normal. This re-orients our perspective. More provides us with a vision of another, better worldand then destabilizes it.

This destabilization is the key. More imagines an alternative to his sixteenth-century Europe, which he then reveals to be a work of imagination. (It is, after all, no-place.) But the reader has been infected; another option has been shown. They cannot safely return to the assurances of their own present as the naturalness of their world has been disrupted. As the opening lines of a brief poem attached to the first printings of Utopia read:

Will thou know what wonders strange be,

in the land that late was found?

Will thou learn thy life to lead,

by divers ways that godly be?

Once an alternativedivers ways that godly behas been imagined, staying where one is or trying something else become options that demand attention and decision.

Yet the choice More offers is not an easy one. By disabling his own vision he keeps us from short-circuiting this imaginative moment into a fixed imaginary: a simple swapping of one image for another, one reality for another, the Emperor with clothes versus the Emperor without clothes. More will not let us accept (or reject) his vision of the ideal society as the final destination. In another poem attached to the early editions, this one printed in the Utopian language and in the voice of the island itself, Utopia explains:

I one of all other without philosophy

Have shaped for many a philosophical city.

In other words, Utopia does not have, nor does it provide the reader, a wholly satisfactory philosophy; its systems of logic, aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology are constantly undercut by More. But it is because the reader cannot satisfy themselves within the confines of Utopia that it can become for many a philosophical city, a place that many can ponder and a space that makes room for all to think.

The problem with asking people to imagine outside the box is that, unaided, they usually will not. We may bend and shape the box, reveal its walls and pound against them, but our imagination is constrained by the tyranny of the possible. Computer programs demonstrate these limitations well. A good programbe it word processing software, a video game, or a simple desktop layoutenables immense possibilities for action (you can even personalize your preferences), but all this action is circumscribed by the programs code, and if you try to do something outside the given algorithms your action will not compute. Use the program long enough and you will forget that there is an outside. With Utopia, however, More provides a peculiar structure, a box that refuses to contain anything for long, a program that repeatedly crashes, yet a structure that succeeds in providing an alternative platform from which to imagine.

The problem with many social imaginaries is that they posit themselves as a realizable possibility. Their authors imagine a future or an alternative and present it as the future or the alternative. If accepted as a genuine social possibility, this claim leads to a number of, not mutually exclusive, results:

1. Brutalizing the present to bring it into line with the imagined futurewitness the Nazi genocide, communist forced collectivization or, in this century, the apocalyptic terrorism of radical Islam.

2. Disenchantment as the future never arrives, and the alternative is never realizedfor example, the descent and consequent depression of the New Left after 1968 or the ideological collapse of neoconservatism in the US after 2008.

3. A vain search for a new imaginary when the promised one fails to appear such as the failed promises of advertising that lead to an endless, and ultimately unsatisfying, cycle of consumption.

4. Living a lieas in The American Dream or Stalins Socialism achieved.

5. Rejecting possibility altogetherdismissing Utopia, with a heartfelt conservative distrust or an ironic liberal wink, as a nave impossibility.

But what if impossibility is incorporated into the social imaginary in the first place? This is exactly what More does. By positioning his imaginary someplace as no-place, he escapes the problems that typically haunt political imaginaries. Yes, the alternatives he describes are sometimes absurd (gold and silver chamber pots? a place called no-place?), but this conscious absurdity is what keeps Utopia from being a singular and authoritative narrative that is, a closed act of imagination to be either accepted or rejected.

In his second letter to Peter Giles, More mounts a defense of absurdity, writing that he cannot fathom how such a clever person, who has criticized Utopia for containing absurdities, can carry on as if there were nothing absurd in the world, or as if any philosopher had ever ordered the state, or even his own house, without instituting something that had better be changed. In this striking passage More links the absurd with a call for revision, seamlessly transitioning from a recognition that the world contains many absurdities to making the point that philosophers creations are never perfect. In the last clause he even suggests that all philosophical plans and orders, whether public or private, are incomplete; they always contain things which ought to be altered. More is, no doubt, referring to his own Utopia here. In creating a philosophical order himself, then salting it with absurdities and ironies, More is making sure the reader will not accept the plan he has described as perfect, complete, or finished, thus, he leaves the door open for reflection and criticism.

Think back to Mores advice to Hythloday in Book I regarding social criticism. Instead of confronting people directly with ones alternative opinion, it is far more effective, More says, to cast about and employ an indirect approach that meets people where they are. To make this point, More draws from the stage, a telling metaphor that implies a means of persuasion in which the audience is drawn into an alternative reality. But recall as well Hythlodays response: Mores method is nothing more than a creative means for lying. For all its limitations, the advantage of direct criticism is that its very negation sets in motion a constant questioning whereby any claims are subjected to rigorous interrogation. It is an open system of thought. But what sorts of checks are there on the phantasmagoric alternatives generated by the dramatic artist or social philosopher? An open Utopia is Mores answer. By creating an alternative reality and simultaneously undermining it, he encourages the reader not be taken in by the fantasy. In other words, it is hard to fool someone with a lie if they already know it is one. The absurd fact, or the faulty fiction, that the clever person initially objected to is precisely what leaves Utopia open to being challenged and, more important, approached as something that had better be changed.

This openness can be problematic. If an advantage of a Utopia open to criticism, participation, modification, and re-creation is that it never hardens into a fixed state that then closes down popular engagement, the possible disadvantage is that such an open Utopia functions poorly as a political ideal. It could be argued that in the process of continual destabilization, Utopia never attains the presence, imaginal or otherwise, necessary to function as a prompt for action. Utopia is therefore not a motivating vision of the promised land, but more like a hallucination in the desert: nothing we should walk toward or work for. To continue with the Biblical analogies: Utopia is the Jewish Messiah who never arrives. But the value of the Jewish Messiah, as Walter Benjamin points out, is not that he or she never arrives, but that their arrival is imminent, every second of time [is] the straight gate through which the Messiah might arrive. Similarly, Utopia gives us something to imagine, anticipate and prepare for. Utopia is not present, as that would preclude the work of popular imagination and action (It has already arrived, so what more is there to do?); nor, however, is it absent, since that would deny us the stimulus with which to imagine an alternative (There is only what we have always known!). Utopia is imminent possibility.

Utopia, however, occupies a different position. It is present. Utopia as an ideal may forever be on the horizon, but Mores Utopia is an ink and paper book that one can behold (and read) in the here and now. It like the Messiah who arrives and announces their plan for the world. However, as was the case with the Christian Messiah, the presence embodied within Mores text exists only for a moment, its power, glory and permanence undermined by its inevitable destruction. This curious state of being and not being, a place that is also no-place, is what gives Utopia its power to stimulate imagination, for between these poles an opening is created for the reader of Utopia to imagine, What if? for themselves.

What if? is the Utopian question. It is a question that functions both negatively and positively. The question throws us into an alternative future: What if there were only common property? But because we still inhabit the present, we also are forced to look back and ask: How come we have private property here and now? Utopia insists that we contrast its image with the realities of our own society, comparing one to the other, stimulating judgment and reflection. This is its critical moment. But this critical reflection is not entirely negating. That is, it is not caught in the parasitical dependency of being wed to the very system it calls into question, for its interlocutor is not only a society that one wants to tear down but also a vision of a world that one would like to build. (This is what distinguishes the What if? of Utopia from the same question posed by dystopias.) Utopian criticism functions not as an end in itself, but as a break with what is for a departure towards something new. By asking What if? we can simultaneously criticize and imagine, imagine and criticize, and thereby begin to escape the binary politics of impotent critique on the one hand and closed imagination on the other.

When teaching or speaking on Utopia, I often find that the ensuing discussion becomes a debate about the content of the bookthat is, whether the characteristics of the alternative society described by More are something to be admired or condemned. There is certainly much to admire about Mores Utopia: the island nations communalism and its inhabitants consideration for one another, for example; or the rational planning of a society that provides labor, leisure, education, and healthcare for all; or a system of justice that seems truly just, as well as a level of religious and intellectual tolerance that today, in our times, seems to be in retreat. And then, of course, there is the blissful lack of lawyers. But there is also much to condemn about Mores alternative society: the formal and casual patriarchy that leaves women subservient to men; the colonization of nearby lands and the Utopians forced removal of those foreign populations deemed not properly productive; the societys system of slavery which, though relatively benign by sixteenth-century standards, still leaves some people the property of others. And while Utopia may be just as a society, Utopians, as individuals, have little freedom to determine their own lives. Finally, like so many Utopias, Mores Utopia, with its virtuous customs and wholesome amusements seems, well, a bit boring.

Such a conversation about the characteristics of Mores imaginary island has a certain value, but to get hung up on the details of Utopia, as with the debate over whether the author is sincere or satirical, is to miss the greater point. The details of the society artfully sketched by More do matter, but only in so far as they provides a vivid place to which the reader might journey, and vicariously inhabit for a time. As More tried to convince Hythloday back in Book I, dramatic immersion is a far more effective means of persuasion than combative criticism. But to defend or attack this or that law or custom of Utopia is to mistake the value of the text, for it is not the specific details conveyed in its content that are truly radical but rather the transformative work the content does. This is where Mores (political) artistry is most effective.

Toward the end of his account of the fanciful Island, Raphael Hythloday, leader of the blind and speaker of nonsense, tells More (and us) that Utopia, because of the plans adopted and the structural foundations laid, is like to be of great continuance. Indeed it will continue, for the very plan and structure of Mores Utopia makes it a generative textone that guarantees that imagination does not stop when the author has finished writing and the book is published. All texts are realized and continuously re-realized by those who experience them and in this way they are forever rewritten, but More went to special pains to ensure that his imaginative act would not be the last word. Lest the reader find themselves too comfortable in this other world he has created, the author goes about unsettling his alternative society, building with one hand while disassembling with the other, fashioning a Utopia that must be engaged dialectically.

More:

Introduction: Open Utopia | The Open Utopia

Wonder Woman’s dueling origin stories, and their effect on the hero’s feminism, explained – Vox

Spoiler warning: There are spoilers including discussion of the plot of the Wonder Woman movie here in this post.

One of the biggest revelations in Wonder Woman is tucked into the end of the film. Diana confronts Ares, the god of war, about the nature of man and mankinds goodness. The two mythic beings have the character-defining philosophical battle of the movie, and then he slips in a declaration that makes Diana question everything she was ever taught: She is the daughter of Zeus, the king of the gods.

Up until this point, Diana believed what her mother had told her that she was made out of clay and Zeus had given her life. By way of magic and myth, Zeus has symbolically been a father to her. But Ares implies something a bit more sordid: that Zeus had a relationship with her mother, Hippolyta, and created a child. And if thats the case, then its not clear what else the Amazons lied to Diana about.

The movie leaves the final interpretation of Dianas origin to its audience, and in doing so reflects a debate over Dianas origin thats been going on in Wonder Woman comic books over the past several years.

The original creator of Wonder Woman is a man named William Moulton Marston, who was, among other things, credited with inventing the lie-detector machine (which brings to light why Diana uses a lasso that compels people to tell the truth). He also had progressive, complex, and intertwining views about gender, relationships, and sex. Marston wrote about women being to be superior to men in some aspects, but was also intrigued by the dynamic between the dominant and submissive hence why so many Wonder Woman comics portrayed the heroine bound and blindfolded.

Marstons origin story reflected these ideas. In his version, Diana was born on a paradise island that was home to Amazons, women who were enslaved by mankind they were kept in chains but eventually broke free. On their island, they developed physical and mental strength and raised Diana, who was born out of clay and did not need a father. Diana, in Marstons eyes, was raised in this perfect world, on this perfect island, inhabited solely by women a deliberate decision.

Marston borrowed Wonder Womans origin story from feminist utopian fiction, which always involved women living on an island, and what happens when a man or a group of men is shipwrecked there, Jill Lepore, a Harvard professor and author of The Secret History of Wonder Woman, told me over email. It was a thought experiment, designed to ask readers to think about how all political orders are man-made. The point was that there werent men. Marston hitched this tale to the legend of the Amazons.

There is no Zeus in Marstons story, and its strictly a world without men. Men were the source of pain and evil for the Amazons, and Marston wanted to explore what it would be like to have a hero like Diana, a woman raised solely by women, completely aware of what men are capable of at their worst. Philosophically, Marston believed that women were capable of showing humanity a different way of life, a peaceful and loving one, in contrast to the ways of man and the patriarchy. Diana was the embodiment of this philosophy.

Not even girls want to be girls so long as our feminine archetype lacks force, strength, and power, Marston wrote in a 1943 issue of The American Scholar. Womens strong qualities have become despised because of their weakness. The obvious remedy is to create a feminine character with all the strength of Superman plus all the allure of a good and beautiful woman.

Marstons story was tweaked in 1959 in Wonder Woman No. 105 (written by Robert Kanigher and drawn by Ross Andru), where Diana is given gifts from the gods and goddesses, like Athenas wisdom, Aphrodites beauty, strength from Demeter that rivals Herculess, and Hermess speed.

This wasnt the first tweak to Dianas origin, or the last: Some stories rewrote and reinterpreted the reason Diana came to the world of man, or how she got her name, or why she carries a sword. But its really the change that came to the comics in 2011, the Zeus-you-are-the-father reveal we see in the movie, that fundamentally redefines Wonder Woman.

In 2011, DC Comics instituted a relaunch of 52 of its titles called the The New 52, which essentially undid those titles previous storylines and reset them at a new starting point; it was characterized at the time as a way to make the comics more accessible to new readers. In writer Brian Azzarello and artist Cliff Chiangs New 52 run, Wonder Womans origin is changed: Diana learns she was never made out of clay, and like what the movie implies with Ares the clay story was used as a cover by Wonder Womans mother to hide that she and Zeus had had a relationship. Further, Ares teaches Diana how to fight.

Along with all this, the new origin credits men with how powerful and formidable Diana is, Alan Kistler wrote for the Mary Sue in 2014. Whereas before she had learned all her training from the Amazon women, her greatest teacher is now Ares.

The Azzarello-Chiang run also includes a story in which the Amazons reproduce by finding sailors, raping them, killing them, and then selling male babies into Hephaestuss slavery in exchange for weapons (this editorial decision was critically maligned, despite general praise for the book).

Adding Zeus to the story, and in particular adding Zeus as Dianas father, undermines the basic plot, Lepore told me. It turns the story of Wonder Woman into something much closer to the story of Thor it makes her story less distinctive.

Essentially, the New 52 reboot inserts men into Marstons story and significantly alters the territory Marston wanted to explore by having Diana raised in a female utopia. In the new telling, Wonder Womans powers dont come from goddesses or other Amazons, but rather from Zeus and Ares. Her mother, the woman who loves her most in life and the epitome of Amazon glory, is refashioned as a betrayer and deceiver. Paradise Island, instead of being a place that lives separately and peacefully from the world of man, now becomes a place where men like Zeus wield power and Amazons are vindictive.

Its hard to reconcile this new origin story with Marstons vision and intent for the character. It also changes the way one might interpret the origin story presented in the movie.

To be clear, Im not here to bury the Azzarello-Chiang run there have been plenty of articles written about how good their story was. Im a fan of how the two explored Dianas psychology and interiority, and how the comic really felt like her own. Furthermore, Marstons view of women and feminism wasnt entirely pristine: As Lepore wrote in her book, Marstons portrayal often veers into feminism as fetish territory.

Marston, as near as I can tell, from reading his letters and diaries, wanted kids to see her as a hero, a very strong woman, who would do whatever she set her mind to do, Lepore told me. He liked that adult men might find her especially alluring, and the scenes of her emancipation (from bondage) thrilling. He didnt think there was a contradiction there.

Essentially, Wonder Woman is a figure of feminism that has been historically written and drawn by men (like a lot of the characters who exist in the comic book universe). So perhaps its better to think of the character as someone who, throughout the years, has reflected what men believe powerful women to be.

The Wonder Woman film made me want to reread Azzarello and Chiangs issues again, and explore the relationships they portray between love and violence, between physical strength and gender, and between Diana and her family. It doesnt feel like a search for answers, but more of an appreciation for where authors, writers, and artists have taken the character in both the comic books and the movie.

To its credit, Wonder Woman slyly doesnt pick one view of Dianas origin, and what it means for the character, over the other. Ares is an unreliable character, and he could be deceiving Diana, but its also clear that Hippolyta kept secrets from her daughter in an attempt to protect her.

The finales portrayal of Wonder Woman finding strength in love seems closer to Marstons ideal, while the annihilation of Ares seems more in line with her New 52 characterization. But the film, and those who worked on it, seems to understand that perhaps the greatest thing you can do for a character like Diana and those mighty Amazons isnt to choose Marston over Azzarello, but rather to inspire fans to form their own ideas about what strong women mean to them.

Read more:

Wonder Woman's dueling origin stories, and their effect on the hero's feminism, explained - Vox

China’s next ‘city from scratch’ called into question – Financial Times


Financial Times
China's next 'city from scratch' called into question
Financial Times
In addition, President Xi Jinping has declared that the new metropolitan utopia will be innovative, green, smart, world-class and with blue skies, fresh air and clean water. The Xiongan plan draws on a blueprint that has been tried and tested in ...

and more »

Read more:

China's next 'city from scratch' called into question - Financial Times

The Dark Side of Globalization – American Spectator

President Trump dares to question whether globalization is an unmitigated good, and for this he is roundly criticized by the Left. But we should question it.

For people like Tom Friedman it is an article of faith that globalization is going to lead to a utopia in which people of different countries, religions, ethnicities and cultures freely and openly interact. Like the pieces of many-colored glass in a kaleidoscope, theyll create, through their interactions, ever-changing mosaics of beauty and harmony. The pieces will retain their distinctive shapes and colors, but the gestalt they form will be infinitely more interesting than the sum of its parts.

Sometimes that works. All culture is hybrid, and American culture more so than others. Nowhere is this more evident than in the arts. Visit the African-American museum in Washington, D.C., and listen to the music. Youll hear the soul of everything that constitutes America and its history.

Only it doesnt always work out so nicely. Borrowing from other cultures used to be a good thing. Now, its cultural appropriation, a major sin for the moral imbeciles on the left. W.E.B. Du Bois said: I sit with Shakespeare, and he winces not. But now Shakespeare is supposed to wince, when a person whos not English reads him.

Then theres the way bad ideas get globalized. Consider the cultural boycotts that are organized against Israel by the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions) movement. BDS was founded by Qatari-born Omar Barghouti, a liar, a tax dodger, and an outspoken advocate of the destruction of the Jewish state. We are witnessing the rapid demise of Zionism, and nothing can be done to save itI, for one, support euthanasia, he said in 2013.

The very left-leaning rock group Radiohead ran up against BDS, when it scheduled a Tel Aviv gig for next July, and BDS rounded up more than 50 artists to sign an incendiary petition to pressure the group to cancel. The public way in which the artists chose to communicate with one of their peers, who chose not to follow their lead, was meant to name, shame and blame, to create a lynch-mob mentality where rational discourse is bypassed in favor of mass hysteria.

Its deeply distressing that they choose to, rather than engage with us personally, throw sh** at us in public, said Radioheads Thom York in an interview with Rolling Stone magazine. But engaging with people who disagree with them is not the way the left operates. Engaging is intellectually difficult, and you might end up changing your mind. Better to bully, intimidate and humiliate. Arouse passions, not minds!

When you try to persuade someone using rational discourse, you are making certain assumptions about them. You assume that they are informed and that they are intelligent and, above all, that they are moral agents. Thats what bothered York so much about the petition signed by his peers. Its deeply disrespectful to assume that were either being misinformed or that were so retarded we cant make these decisions ourselves, he said. I thought it was patronizing in the extreme. Actually, its more than patronizing; its dehumanizing.

In his Genealogy of Morals,Nietzsche describesvaluation making moral choices rather than reason as the trait that defines humanity. But allowing people to make choices is antithetical to the left, because it implies that it doesnt have a monopoly on truth. For the left, people are vessels, limited to receiving truths established by a consensus of elites. Thats how teachers treat their students, and thats how the elites treat everyone else. Witness the climate scientists who anathemize those who wont believe in their consensus truths about the weather.

And heres where globalism presents the greatest danger. In universities across the world, the same tactics are being used, the same messages propounded as absolute truth. Intellectual discussion is a shining artifact of the past. It is not about creating an intellectual space! It is not! Do you understand that? a Yale student shouts at a professor who tries to reason with her. Its about creating a home here! If he disagrees with her, the professor should step down. And step down he was forced to do.

York cant wrap his mind around the idea that diversity of opinion isnt permitted in academia. The university thing is more of a head f**k for me. Its like,really? You cant go talk to other people who want to learn stuff in another country? Really? The one place where you need to be free to express everything you possibly can. You want to tell these people you cant do that? His incredulity is refreshing, as more and more we become inured to this sort of thing.

The globalization is good folks would be more persuasive, if we were all saints and only benign ideas were shared across cultures. Instead, were seeing bad ideas being propagated across borders and cultures on the web, in social media. New internet mobs have arisen to persecute people whose ideas they dont share. Rational discourse has nothing to do with it, but only smash and grab and silence anyone with whom you disagree. Its what we used to see on television, when Muslims across the Middle East rioted when they perceived that Islam had been dissed. Its what we see today in America, at Yale and on other college campuses, and its the dark side of globalization.

President Trump is right, then, to be skeptical about the effects of globalization, when its the wrong values that are being globalized. American openness to new ideas, tolerance for different beliefs, and the rigors of Western scientific inquiry are being discarded. In their place, were importing the third worlds strictures on liberty.

Link:

The Dark Side of Globalization - American Spectator

Jordie Bellaire: Vision Visionary – Marvel (press release) (registration) (blog)

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Tj Dietsch

The beauty of Tom King, Gabriel Hernandez Walta and Jordie Bellaires VISION continues to inspire and impress. Though the series launched about two years ago, the six-issue VISION DIRECTORS CUT limited series will remind existing readers of that goodness while also bringing in new fans. Each DIRECTORS CUT issue features two of the original books, plus plenty of in-depth, behind-the-scenes info.

Last month we talked with Walta about bringing the story to life and now were chatting up Bellaire about building a color scheme that not only went a bold new direction, but also made reference to the past while taking intriguing twists and turns, especially during flashbacks.

Marvel.com: Classic Vision has this bright, bold color scheme. I want to say that the version in VISION is more muted and deep, but am not sure if thats the right terminology! How would you compare the two palettes?

Jordie Bellaire: I think Visions newest look is dictated mostly by Gabriel Waltas beautiful use of washes combined with new creative technology for more understated and subtle coloring in programs like Photoshop. As a team, we werent forced into using what was available to us at the time of classic Vision which was only bright, selective colors. We could go there if we wanted to, like the flashbacks, but we were allowed the freedom to tell a story with a range of color and techniques.

Marvel.com: Did it take a while to nail down this new color scheme during the design process?

Jordie Bellaire: Not really; I think having already worked with Gabriel Walta on great books like MAGNETO we were prepared for what it was like together as a team. We think a lot alike. We both take great inspiration from films, for instance the Coen Brothers have come up a few times in the past few years that weve worked together because of their excellent use in simplicity of composition and color design.

Tom King was also just a dream to work with and is extremely hands off in the coloring process. He allows me to be as loud or restrained as Id like, trusting that Im working in service of his story and the artwhich Id like to think I am and did!

Marvel.com: From a color and texture perspective, this book feels very different from most super hero books. Where does that come from?

Jordie Bellaire: Again, I think this is really dictated by the genius that is Gabriel Walta. He is incredibly unique. I congratulate Marvel for hiring him on high-profile books that, 35 years ago, he maybe would havent had the opportunity to do. His art is what makes this book such a success, combined again with Toms impeccable storytelling. It makes it fairly easy to get in and do my job since I respect the two as artists so much. Creatively, everything was brought to the table and we all sat at that table, taking on each others strengths and leveling them up each issue.

Marvel.com: You went with more themed colors during the flashbacks of Agatha Harkness, Victor, and Virginia. How was it figuring out those visual dynamics?

Jordie Bellaire: These flashbacks were some of my favorite things to do. Agatha, the story of a ghost that finds the future in blood, Virginia and the others Visions have flashbacks that echo to their iconic skin color and yellow energylike the memory of a droid, mechanical and scratchy. And lastly, Victor, half human and half droid, the yellow is peppered throughout a world of blue, hes in the center somewhere between Agatha and the Visions. These sorts of things arent planned incredibly well in advance but I do like to think on them as I see the art and digest the story. Thankfully, Tom wove such a well-told story that it all comes together and color pushes the themes home even further still.

Marvel.com: What do you think it was about this book that resonated so much with so many people?

Jordie Bellaire: This book is a tragedy. Its a book about normalcy and the tragedy that is normalcy and the desire to belong. I think this resonates with many people as I think many of us secretly feel this way. The need to fit in, to be loved, to be respected but to be yourself and be true to that self. Its an extremely deep and heavy work that in the current climate of super hero books, really stepped into the emotional darkness many didnt quite expect. It deals so much with the human condition and what is a human condition, stories like that will live on forever and continuously be told as were fascinated about truly connecting to each other and to ourselves.

VISION DIRECTORS CUT #1 by Tom King, Gabriel Hernandez Walta and Jordie Bellaire phases in on June 14 with the second issue following on July 12.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Tim Stevens

The client, Jennifer Walters, in addition to working as an attorney, has long acted as a super hero known as She-Hulk with an extensive history as an Avenger and solo adventurer. For years, she largely lived her life as She-Hulk and was happy to do so. This was but one contrast between her and her forever-conflicted cousin Bruce Banner who, even when he was in the so-called Professor Hulk form, struggled with revealing hisusuallygreen-skinned alter ego to the world.

All of this is important to note as prologue as the Walters who arrived for session was not tall, muscular, and green. Instead she presented as adult white woman of approximately average height and physical fitness. The client explained that she had suffered a traumatic physical injury that had, in ways not yet fully understood, altered her transformation process. Now, she rarely presents in her Hulk formshe is currently eschewing the addition of Sheand when she does appears to be grey in color with bright green scars across her skin. She also described her presentation as more out of control and perhaps feral than her more recognizable green hued form.

The changes in her physical form and transformation process are not all that is different about her, she disclosed to this writer.

While she has, at times, struggled with fear and panic and for a brief time did experience moments of transformation like her cousin where she seemed to become more like a wild animal when particularly afraid, this period was a very short-lived part of her life and did not alter her overall presentation.

Now, however, she reports panic attacks and PTSD-like symptoms that result in what this writer is referring to as micro transformationsmoments so brief that her physical changes are not even noticed by her but the results surround her. For instance, she might briefly dissociate in the midst of an attack only to realize the elevator keypad is smashed or that her hardwood floor has large finger sized divots in it.

Additionally, the client is processing feelings of grief stemming from the death of her cousin while she was in her coma. These feelings are complicated by the additional knowledge that a former teammateClint Barton aka Hawkeyeis the man responsible for Banners death and her feelings that perhaps Barton did it at Banners behest. She admits she has not grieved properly for her cousin and worries that it might be sometime before she is able to as she struggles to get the rest of my life back on track.

Given this writers role in assessing Bartons fitness for trial, I have determined it may be unhelpful to the client to continue to work with me and have therefore referred her to Doctors Mariko Tamaki and Georges Duarte for further sessions. She will next see them on July 12 and their progress note can be located in file HULK #8 at that time.

Psy D. Candidate Tim Stevens is a Staff Therapist used to have a Hulk-like alter ego named the Raging Skull. It mostly just got him in trouble.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Blake Garris

Oshie Bichar and Taylor Lumley of the band Beartooth stop by Marvel HQ to talk about their music, their comic book collections and much more.

Download episode #291.5 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check out Marvel Podcast Central, grab the TWiM RSS feed and subscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes or Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel including our latest episode!

This Week in Marvel focuses on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releasesfrom comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Tuesday and Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan Agent M Penagos and Editorial Director of Marvel Digital Media Ben Morse with Manager, Video & Content Production: Blake Garris, Editor Marc Strom, and Assistant Editor Christine Dinh. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes! Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to @AgentM, @BenJMorse, @blakegarris or @Marvel with the hashtag #ThisWeekinMarvel!

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Amanda Ames

After falling prey to the siren song of an old flame, Rocket starts back down the not so righteous path of stealing from the rich and, well, keeping it for himself mostly. But he gets played by a pretty face and ends up trapped deep within the bowels of the Colon where the clock winds down. Can he escape before the metaphoricalor possibly literalcrap hits the fan?

ROCKET #3 takes us inside one of the worst penitentiaries space has to offer on July 12 and we spoke with writer Al Ewing to give you all the lay of the land before setting off on this daring escape mission.

Marvel.com: Give us a quick run down of The Colon, what its like on the inside, how Rocket ended up there and why its called that?

Al Ewing: Im so glad you asked me this question. What is it like, inside The Colon? In the hot, cramped confines of The Colon? How did Rocket end up in The Colon? Some would say that, in a real sense, Rocket entered The Colon the moment I began work on the character. Anyway, to answer your question: The Colon is a dark place, where the squeeze is on and something somewhere stinks. Theres a network of tough guys therea ring of muscle, if you willand Rocket has to navigate the twists and turns of The Colon in order to escape through the rear exit. Its very much a bum note in his life.

Anyway, its named after the punctuation mark, clearly.

Marvel.com: Rockets been behind bars before; how does this joint stack up to other prisons and how is he handling life on the inside? What does he miss most?

Al Ewing: Silly name aside, this ones pretty grim. Its owned by a big corporation, and the shareholders like it when the prisoners are brutally and inhumanely punished; theres a lot of prison shouldnt be a holiday camp thinking in the richer parts of space. The prisoners are put to work making the space equivalent of license plates all dayand if they dont, they go to The Hole, which is basically a pay-per-view gladiatorial arena that makes money for the prison through illegal gambling. Oh yeah, and every prisoner has a punishment implant attached to them that can deliver pain in various different ways for the most minor infractions. Its a hellhole, essentially.

Marvel.com: Im sure Rocket is already coming up with an escape planwhat can you tell us about it and how does the execution of said plan go?

Al Ewing: At first, Rockets keeping his head down, getting the lay of the landbut then he learns that theres a deadline, and if he doesnt break out immediately, hes screwed. So the countdown is on, and it involves taking everything The Colon throws at him and turning it into an asset. We put all the puzzle pieces in place, and then we watch Rocket put them together. Not that his escape is a certainty; its well within my power to have him get all the way to the end, get a stroke of bad luck, and end up in an even worse situation. Maybe Ill do that, maybe I wontIm a capricious god.

Marvel.com: Does Rocket have any help/meet anyone while hes there? Any interesting new characters to tease?

Al Ewing: Well, this might be the sensational character find of 2017: Rockets cellmate, Gasbag, a living sentient gas in a kind of rubber gimp suit. Also we have the usual complement of alien creatures, all with their own laws, customs, and bodily functions and all wonderfully illustrated by Adam Gorham.

Marvel.com: If Rocket taught Prison Life 101 what would be on the syllabus? What are Rockets three rules for surviving the slammer?

Al Ewing: As we see in the issue, Rockets first rule is to learn the lay of the land and find out the individual peculiarities of this particular hoosegow. Learn who his friends are, learn who his enemies are, learn the routines. Somewhere in that knowledge is the map to the exit.

The second rule is to make sure you get the top bunk. Thats the plum position in any cell. Norman Stanley Fletcher had the top bunk. Seriously, Rocket will fight you.

And the third rule is that there are no rules! Psyche!

Marvel.com: What is your favorite scene in issue #3?

Al Ewing: Well, without spoiling too much, theres a wonderful bit that happens in the vacuum of space. Again, Adams work is superlative here; he really conveys the feeling of weightlessness, the terror of being in airless space with only a very fragile means of survival. Another favorite bit is when Rocket has an exchange with an old lag, a wizened inmate with vital information on the prison setup; Adam draws a wonderful rhinoceros person, which I think readers will probably end up falling it love with.

Marvel.com: Is there anything you can tease about whats in store for our furry weapons crazed friend?

Al Ewing: Well, from here, hes meeting up with a very special guest staryour friend and mine, Deadpooland together, theyre going to get deep into the gangster life, with tommy guns, bursting out of cakes, and a heist aimed at a particularly vicious space mobster. Adam wanted a space Kingpinand I put my thinking cap on and gave him one thatll hopefully be a presence in Marvel Space for a little while to come.

Be sure to catch all the face palming, snarky remark making, prison life action in ROCKET #3 out July 12, written by Al Ewing with art by Adam Gorham!

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Steffi Feldman

The time-displaced original Children of the Atom make up the X-Men Blue team, with Jean Grey, Cyclops, Beast, Angel, and Iceman working alongside their former archenemy Magneto. While its hard enough adjusting to a new era, these kids and their formerly villainous ally now also have a Secret Empire to contend with.

Where to even start?

We asked X-MEN: BLUE writer Cullen Bunn about issue #7, available July 12!

Marvel.com: First off, how has writing X-MEN: BLUE been different from some of the other X-Men projects youve worked on before?

Cullen Bunn: Its interesting, because I was writing UNCANNY X-MEN and when I got the call that we were going to be shifting over to X-MEN: BLUE and it would be the original five time lost characters. Ive been pretty honest with thismy first reaction was not overjoyed. Because as much as I love those characters, theyre not what I would consider my X-Men. Like, they werent from the era that I really got into X-Men. So I was a little hesitant! I wasnt sure I was the right guy to write the book.

As I started writing those characters, though, and putting them through the stories Id been planning on telling, Ive become more and more excited about them. Im glad that this is the team Im writing, because they have a completely different dynamic and viewpoint on the world; Im able to tell kind of classic X-Men adventures and uncanny adventures. Ive come to really love writing these characters now.

Marvel.com: You kind of got to make them your own, then! So, now that were all nice and emotionally invested in these guys, how will the Secret Empire affect them?

Cullen Bunn: Well, without giving too much awayas weve seen in SECRET EMPIRE, California has been ceded to mutants as a new mutant homeland. On the surface, that looks great! Its an opportunity for mutants and homo sapiens to live in peace together. But, as well find in X-MEN: BLUE, thats not necessarily playing out the way its supposed to. Its definitely a situation where we have mutants in power and that power is sort of a corrupting force. It plays to X-Men Blue for a number of reasons.

First of all, Magnetowhos acting as sort of a mentor for the X-Menhas said recently that he does not believe the idea of a mutant utopia works. Hes seen it backfire in horrible ways time and time again, and he keeps getting drawn back into that, lured into this idea of a mutant paradise; it is a dream [of his], but now he doesnt think that dream will ever come true. He thinks that a place like New Tian is a disaster waiting to happen, and he wants no part of it from that perspective.

We have also seen, however, that Magneto and the X-Men Blue team have a beef with Emma Frost and Sebastian Shaw and certain characters that are entrenched in this new mutant regime. And what were gonna see in X-MEN: BLUE is the new X-Men team almost as a rebel force at work inside New Tian.

Marvel.com: Will the Blue team take on the larger Secret Empire plotlines as well?

Cullen Bunn: Theres definitely some parallels with whats happening in New Tian and whats going on in the Marvel Universe as a whole, but I wanted to focus on it mainly from a mutant perspective. Again, without giving away too many spoilers, theres a villain that shows up in these issues who I feel has a direct correlation with whats going on with Steve Rogers and is cut from very similar cloth story-wise and we definitely lean into that to shore up those parallels even more.

Marvel.com: Thats so cool! It sort of unifies the different threads of the Marvel Universe narratively, like, a microcosm? Or even just winking at another storyline thats happening.

Cullen Bunn: Yeah! The goal with these tie-ins for me is always that a reader can continue reading X-MEN: BLUE and not get thrown off too much by the events of the Marvel Universe. But this is such a big event! Things are changing in such monumental ways, theres no way to [avoid it]. But I wanted to make sure that were seeing [that] story from a distinctively mutant point of view while not ignoring whats going on in the world at large.

Marvel.com: So lets talk Magneto. How is such a powerful character fitting into all this Secret Empire hubbub? Is he joining, holding back, fighting against it?

Cullen Bunn: We talked a lot about Magneto early on in the discussion about whats going on in the world of Secret Empire and really, Magneto seems to be sitting this one out. For reasons of his own, he has struck a bargain that hes just going to sit this one out and not interfere, and hes agreed to that.

However.

The X-Men team is there in New Tian, and theyre obviously not just sitting back. Now, then the question will comeare they working on Magnetos orders or against what Magneto wants? As the tie-in goes on I think theres even a question posed like, dont you think Magneto would have prepared for this? And we see some pretty big changes among the team itself as some of those contingencies begin to come into play.

Marvel.com: So it might be that he has something up his sleeve?

Cullen Bunn: Well, Magneto always has something up his sleeve. I think were gonna have come interesting interactions. Hes definitely taking a back seat in this tie-in and you dont see him getting a lot of [face] time, but his actions are pretty important to the story and theyll shape the X-Men Blue team after this event. And when we do finally see Magneto, I think we have an interesting interaction between Magneto and Steve Rogers in the arc that Im pretty excited about.

Marvel.com: I know that youve been writing Magneto for a while, so Im sure youll do him justice. After all, you know him pretty wellyou guys are on, like, a first-name basis.

Cullen Bunn: [Laughs] I do kind of feel like I have a handle on where hes coming from and how he would see whats been going on in the world, but I also know that Magnetohe knows that, if he disagrees with this, its not something he can go into with guns blazing, so to speak, because that would fail. Hes got to be a little cagier about what hes doing.

Marvel.com: How is the team reacting to this pseudo-utopia? Like, how are they taking it?

Cullen Bunn: Well, theyre not taking it well. [Laughs] Its not going well for them. Its a weird situation for them because heres this place that should be a safe haven for mutants and yet they find themselves struggling against that very ideal.

In fact, Ive often said that, to some degree, the world that theyre in right now? The New Tian mutant utopia is almost like their Days of Futures Past. They are seeing the world theyve always been afraid theyd see happen, but they never expected these threats and these dangers to be coming from a mutant source to the degree that it is.

As well get into the first issue, were seeing the X-Men dealing with mutants whove been imprisoned and who are scheduled for psychic reconditioning because they dont support the law of the land. Thats the kind of thing that scares the hell out of them, and they just cant sit back and let it happen.

See how it all plays out this summer in X-MEN BLUE #7 by Cullen Bunn and Cory Smith, available July 12.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Chris Baker

We all know that the first Star Wars film changed the face of pop culture forever when it hit theaters 40 years ago todaybut its not just the movie thats celebrating that milestone in 2017. Star Wars comics arrived with force in 1977, and hundreds of issues later, theyre more popular now than ever.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of Star Wars, were looking back at our 40 favorite moments from the history of comics from a galaxy far, far awayone day at a time.

STAR WARS INFINITIES: A NEW HOPE #1 kicks off with a scenario we know all too well: As Han Solo shouts, Lets blow this thing and go home!, Luke Skywalker trusts in the Force, firing two proton torpedoes into the Death Stars exhaust port. From there, the mighty battle stationdoesnt blow up? Unfortunately for Luke and the Rebel Alliance, one of the torpedoes detonated prematurely, only damaging the Death Star rather than destroying itand the Star Wars saga as we know it completely changes from that point on. Welcome to STAR WARS INFINITIESessentially the What If? comics of the Star Wars galaxy.

For four issues INFINITIES: A NEW HOPE twists everything we know about the events to follow, managing a healthy balance of new content and familiarity. Obi-Wan instructs Luke to head to Dagobah to train with Yoda, for example, but this happens right away, with Han and Chewbacca along for the trip to the swamp planet. And what happens when Darth Vader turns his attention to tempting Leia to the dark side instead of Luke? It all ends with a showdown between brother and sister, while Yoda takes the matter of destroying the Death Star into his own hands.

And if thats not enough alternate-galaxy Star Wars for you, this series was followed up with STAR WARS INFINITIES: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, where Luke freezes to death on Hoth, and STAR WARS INFINITIES: RETURN OF THE JEDI, where Leias thermal detonator accidentally explodes in Jabbas Palace.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Ben Morse

Tons of new titles hit Marvel Unlimited this June! Medusa and Storm rally their troops in INHUMANS VS. X-MEN! Hellfire and Brimstone is that Robbie Reyes as the new GHOST RIDER? Carol Danvers commands Alpha Flight as the MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL! Guardians GAMORA and STAR-LORD take off in their own series! And while Kate Bishop: HAWKEYE becomes Los Angeles ace archer, Richard Rider returns to the cosmos in NOVA! To top it off? DOCTOR APHRA, Darth Vaders rogue archeologist, begins her solo quest for rare artifacts and this time shes ditching the Sith!

Week of 6/5

BLACK WIDOW #8 DEADPOOL: BACK IN BLACK #4 EXTRAORDINARY X-MEN #16 GHOST RIDER #1 GREAT LAKES AVENGERS #2 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #14 IVX #0 MS. MARVEL #13 NEW AVENGERS #18 OLD MAN LOGAN #14 STAR WARS ANNUAL #2 THE TOTALLY AWESOME HULK #12 THUNDERBOLTS #7 UNCANNY INHUMANS #16

Week of 6/12

ALL-NEW WOLVERINE #15 AVENGERS #2 CHAMPIONS #3 DEADPOOL #23 MOON KNIGHT #9 NOVA #1 SCARLET WITCH #13 SPIDER-MAN 2099 #18 STAR WARS: DOCTOR APHRA #1 THE CLONE CONSPIRACY #3 THE UNWORTHY THOR #2

Week of 6/19

ALL-NEW X-MEN #16 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: RENEW YOUR VOWS #2 DAREDEVIL #14 DEADPOOL: BACK IN BLACK #5 DOCTOR STRANGE/PUNISHER: MAGIC BULLETS INFINITE COMIC #3 FOOLKILLER #2 GHOST RIDER X-MAS SPECIAL INFINITE COMIC #1 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #15 GWENPOOL HOLIDAY SPECIAL: MERRY MIX-UP #1 HAWKEYE #1 IVX #1 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS: ULTRON REVOLUTION #6 MOSAIC #3 OLD MAN LOGAN #15 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST #11 SILK #15 SPIDER-MAN #10 STAR WARS: POE DAMERON #9 THE TOTALLY AWESOME HULK #13 THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #15 UNCANNY AVENGERS #17

Week of 6/26

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #22 AVENGERS #2.1 BLACK PANTHER: WORLD OF WAKANDA #2 CAGE! #3 CAPTAIN AMERICA: SAM WILSON #16 DEADPOOL & THE MERCS FOR MONEY #6 DOCTOR STRANGE #15 GAMORA #1 GWENPOOL, THE UNBELIEVABLE #9 INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #2 MARVEL UNIVERSE GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #15 OCCUPY AVENGERS #2 PATSY WALKER, A.K.A. HELLCAT! #13 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST: SWEET CHRISTMAS ANNUAL #1 SILVER SURFER #8 SLAPSTICK INFINITE COMIC #3 SOLO #3 SPIDER-GWEN #15 SQUADRON SUPREME #14 STAR-LORD #1 STAR WARS: DOCTOR APHRA #2 THANOS #2 THE MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 THE PUNISHER #7 ULTIMATES 2 #2 UNCANNY X-MEN #16 VENOM #2

Published Jun 2, 2017 By Christine Dinh

Weve got a brand new episode of This Week in Marvel, presented by Loot Crate, to help you kick off the weekend!

Ryan and Ben give you the rundown on this weeks comics hottest releases including SECRET EMPIRE, MOON KNIGHT, CABLE and more! Weve also got tons of comics news from Tom Brevoortand Alanna Smith(49:23); West Coast news from Marc, Christine with your weekly dose of Marvel Games and Marvel Animation (1:14:21); and both coasts diveinto the 90s-tastic world of X-Cutioners Song Pt. 1 with our Unlimited Reading Club (1:21:13)! Its all here on a funky fresh episode of the official Marvel podcast!

Be sure to join our #TWIMURC next time where we have both coasts tackle X-Cutioners Song Pt. 2! Share your thoughts with us using the hashtag #TWIMURC!

Loot Crate has assembled the Marvel Gear and Goods crate for the ultimate Marvel fan. This crate features official Marvel items like collectible home goods, apparel and more every other month! If anyone knows the importance of downtime, its Peter Parker, Miles Morales, Gwen Stacy, Jessica Drew and their Wall-Crawling peers. Unwind after a hard day with denizens of the SPIDER-VERSE! Order your own Marvel Gear and Goods crate by heading to lootcrate.com/MarvelGear and use promo code MARVELPOD to save $3 on your subscription today.

Download episode #292 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check outMarvel Podcast Central,grab the TWiM RSS feedandsubscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes, so you never miss an episode! We are now also on Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel!

This Week in Marvel will focus on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releasesfrom comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP & Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan Agent M Penagos and Marvel Editorial Director of Digital Media Ben Morse, along with Marvel.com Editor Marc Strom, Marvel.com Assistant Editor Christine Dinh, and Manager of Video & Content Production Blake Garris. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes! Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to@AgentM,@BenJMorse, @chrissypediaor@Marvelwith the hashtag#ThisWeekinMarvel!

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Jordie Bellaire: Vision Visionary - Marvel (press release) (registration) (blog)

Men Are from Mars, Wonder Woman is Also from Mars – VICE

Garage's life-changing, mind-altering launch is coming soon. But until then, we're publishing original stories, essays, videos, and more to give you a taste of what's to come.

In the final battle in Patty Jenkins's blockbusterista Wonder Woman, our heroine at last triumphs by slamming her giant broadsword the absurdly-named "God-Killer"straight through her prone enemy.

It's more than suggestively Freudian. It's a straight up hate-fuck.

Since her 1941 comic book premiere, Wonder Woman has inspired an enormous amount of critical thoughtoften feminist, often psychosexual. Her creatoreccentric Harvard academic, free-love advocate, and B+D enthusiast William Moulten Marstondescribed Wonder Woman as "psychological propaganda." Inspired by feminist utopian fiction, Wonder Woman was built to be a role model of gender equality, to empower girls to be strong, courageous equals to men. Marston promoted the idea (in kinky yet oddly wholesome ways) that women were "love leaders," and a patriarchy that could learn to submit to female power, and/or embrace sisterhood as an equal alternative to brotherhood, could usher in what comics expert Noah Berlatsky described as an "erotic matriarchal utopia."

The new Wonder Woman dispenses with this richly textured backdrop, and in the interest of wider box-office appeal, offers a Wonder Woman whom enemies of feminism will find agreeably meaningless.

We meet Young Princess Diana, in her Moana-like beginnings, at her home on Paradise Island. Plucky and precocious, young Diana learns the ways of the Amazonsmuscular, humorless women in leather gladiator/cheerleader skirts, brass headbands, and eyebrows plucked into angles of gravitas, who spend their days practicing archery, swordplay, equestrian stunt-riding, and leggy, tanned-glute-revealing, anti-gravity Caipoera air-spins.

In long and tediously animated exposition, Princess Diana's mother Hippolyta narrates the backstory of the all-female island of Amazons. She explains that Ares, the God of War, is their enemyhe once enslaved them to Greeks (though she neglects to mention that their bullet-repelling Bracelets symbolized their former slave-shackles, and were intended to remind the Amazons of their vow to never to capitulate again to male dominance.)

Diana is shown the great weapon of the Amazons: the "Godkiller," a giant broadsword a la Excalibur. This, her mother the Queen explains, ensures the peace of Paradise Islandand she prays that nobody ever needs to use it.

Dissolve to: Princess Diana, grown up, in the form of model/actress Gal Gadot. Gadot, it must be noted, is absurdly white-phosphorus Hota Natalie Portman 5.0, likely built by the same roboticists who created Alisha Vikander. So it is almost understandable that perhaps in an attempt at fealty to Ms. Gadot's Israeli nationality, the Amazons speak with an accent only describable as "Transylvanian Hobbit."

"Dhey do not desarve you," Hippolyta tells Diana, when she explains the evil nature of human men, leaving out the usual, "Men just want to get into your scabbard."

Destiny appears in the form of Captain Steve Trevor (Chris Pine), a WWI flyboy whom Diana saves from drowning when he crashes into the sea with a stolen German fighter plane. Diana has never seen a MAN (or even a man) before she rolls Captain Trevor onto the beach in a From Here To Eternity shore break-moment. When he awakens, she stares at him with wide Hentai eyes of sparkling virgin wonder (not unlike Daryl Hannah in Splash!).

Once bound in the golden Lasso of Truth, Captain Trevor is compelled to disclose his secret mission, with a face that suggests one of the Amazons is utilizing the power of an Invisible Prostate Exam. He explains the nature of war to Princess Diana: there are "Good Guys" (he is one of them) and "Bad Guys," who are basically Nazis, even though it is only 1918 (because apparently Germans have always been Nazis, in our current American mythologywhich comes from comic-books, after all).

Then comes a Blue Lagoon moment where vestal Diana walks in on the Captain Trevor naked, in one of the cavernous yet blue-glowing hot tubs of Amazonia. She regards him curiously in his ripped, oiled Magic Mike-like splendor with something like a reverse male gazewhich ends up in a double-entendre conversation about the size of his penis, which he assures her is larger than average.

Thus inspired, Diana, against the wishes of her mother, resolves to stop all wars by going to the Front with Captain Trevor to slay Ares, the God of War himself, and save mankind. Diana and Steve Trevor sail a boat together back to London, where she is an innocent mermaid-out-of-water, an Eliza Doolittle with just a skosh of Tarzan-meets-Pretty Woman. She doesn't understand societal rules, and she can't dress in the latest London fashions without throwing her Edwardian skirt over her head to see if she can kickbox in it. It's so adorable to see her beautiful face enjoying ice-cream way too much for the first time, just like a baby.

Since she's most beautiful woman anyone has ever seen, Trevor attempts to conceal her beauty so she isn't so "distracting." She is outfitted in a fetching secretarial suit, and the ultimate beauty killer: nerdy black glasses (the introduction of which compelled a drunk guy in the front row of the screening I attended to scream, "She looks even hotter now!")

Courtesy Clay Enos / TM & DC Comics

Wonder Woman is introduced to Etta Candy, who, in the early Marston comics, was her brave and plucky best friend. Here, she is a frumpy suffragette working as Trevor's secretary. "Where I come from, they call that being a slave," Diana Prince remarks when Etta describes her position. They do not become close friends.

Female camaraderie has been replaced with a Band of Brothers: Captain Trevor's ragtag team of multinational, soldier-of-fortune miscreants. There is an Arab secret agent (Algerian actor Sad Taghmaoui), whose expertise in deception nonetheless belies an uncomfortably colonial Gunga Din-subservience, and a drunken Scot (played by Ewen Bremner, most memorable for his role as a worthless junkie in Trainspotting, here with the same Village Idiot haircut) who exemplifies Drunken Scottishness by shouting things like "PUT AIT DOON, WOOOMUN" while wearing a kilt.

In the midst of a convoluted plot concerning an evil German General and "psychopath" scientist (a Turkish woman wearing half of a sectional plastic face that looks like it was modeled on a collapsible version of Angelina Jolie), Diana is informed by the enemy (a dramatically abused David Thewlis) that her true destiny, as a child of Zeus, is to be a living superweapon.

In one fell caped-crusader swoopSPOILER ALERT Wonder Woman's original motivations of peace, justice and girl-power are replaced with the same justifications employed to warrant the testosterone rampages of action heroes like Rambo, Chuck Norris, or The Road Warrior. Captain Trevor heroically sacrifices himself in battle (shortly after devirginating Diana), and her Goddess energies and love-leadership are replaced with a narrative of personal vengeance. His death enables her to finally access her ultimate core-power, strip down to the full metal swimsuit, and become personally thermonuclear.

And here we come to Wonder Woman's dramatic climax: the impalement of her enemy on the "Godkilling" Excaliburan ultimate, totally unsubtle act of penetration. It doesn't require any kind of degree in semiotics to acknowledge this mythologically, symbolically, or historicallya giant stabbing weapon is pretty much the last thing that womanhood represents.

It plays straight into the heart of mass female manipulation, via the beauty industrial complex: no girls can grow up to be like this Wonder Woman. This virginal alien princess Wonder Woman can't befriend or relate to other womenshe is too exceptional in every way.

She's a leggy woman-child Charles Bronson who always looks like she's in a slow-mo hair commercial while killing Germans in a metal monokini.

She's a Victoria's Secret Angel of Death in war-machine panties. She's Shock-and-Awe Barbie. She's a femme fatale Panzer with Pantene Hair, the ass of a 10-year-old boy, and enough megatonnage of revenge to insure American adventures in imperial expansion for as long as the franchise survives. She is the daughter of Zeus, made of clayand it is her super-hot boyfriend who creates her mythological awakening by bestowing and conferring male power into her with his magic penis.

At a time like now, when feminism feels so embattled, muted, and ridiculous; when the economy starves men, but women 17% more so; when there is absurdly dystopic material like The Handmaid's Tale actually making emotional sense on Huluthis Wonder Woman isn't a women's liberator or a symbol of girl-power, but a mighty collaborator in ongoing feminine oppression.

Feminism has made few strides since the seventies, and Cinderella myths are destructive enough already. Pro-war propaganda that drives young women onto battlefields is the last thing American needs, now that a girl can legally be shot in the uterus, but still can't control what happens inside it. Wonder Woman suggests that little girls need to grow up not just to be supermodels, not just supersoldiersbut actual weapons of mass destruction.

Wonder Woman could have been the first real girl-power, big-budget action movie, but sadly, all of her Amazon energy was castrated in the service of making her an agent of propaganda.

The most nauseating thing about this Wonder Woman is its jingoistic obscurantism. In a pure Orwellian sense, Wonder Woman is telling us that War is Peace and that Love is Hateand that women, in their Amazon Prime, are virgin supermodels, nuclear missiles, and most of all...they are men.

Cintra Wilson is a culture critic whose books include Fear and Clothing: Unbuckling American Style, and Caligula for President: Better American Living Through Tyranny.

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Men Are from Mars, Wonder Woman is Also from Mars - VICE

Psych Ward: The Hulk – Marvel (press release) (registration) (blog)

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Tim Stevens

The client, Jennifer Walters, in addition to working as an attorney, has long acted as a super hero known as She-Hulk with an extensive history as an Avenger and solo adventurer. For years, she largely lived her life as She-Hulk and was happy to do so. This was but one contrast between her and her forever-conflicted cousin Bruce Banner who, even when he was in the so-called Professor Hulk form, struggled with revealing hisusuallygreen-skinned alter ego to the world.

All of this is important to note as prologue as the Walters who arrived for session was not tall, muscular, and green. Instead she presented as adult white woman of approximately average height and physical fitness. The client explained that she had suffered a traumatic physical injury that had, in ways not yet fully understood, altered her transformation process. Now, she rarely presents in her Hulk formshe is currently eschewing the addition of Sheand when she does appears to be grey in color with bright green scars across her skin. She also described her presentation as more out of control and perhaps feral than her more recognizable green hued form.

The changes in her physical form and transformation process are not all that is different about her, she disclosed to this writer.

While she has, at times, struggled with fear and panic and for a brief time did experience moments of transformation like her cousin where she seemed to become more like a wild animal when particularly afraid, this period was a very short-lived part of her life and did not alter her overall presentation.

Now, however, she reports panic attacks and PTSD-like symptoms that result in what this writer is referring to as micro transformationsmoments so brief that her physical changes are not even noticed by her but the results surround her. For instance, she might briefly dissociate in the midst of an attack only to realize the elevator keypad is smashed or that her hardwood floor has large finger sized divots in it.

Additionally, the client is processing feelings of grief stemming from the death of her cousin while she was in her coma. These feelings are complicated by the additional knowledge that a former teammateClint Barton aka Hawkeyeis the man responsible for Banners death and her feelings that perhaps Barton did it at Banners behest. She admits she has not grieved properly for her cousin and worries that it might be sometime before she is able to as she struggles to get the rest of my life back on track.

Given this writers role in assessing Bartons fitness for trial, I have determined it may be unhelpful to the client to continue to work with me and have therefore referred her to Doctors Mariko Tamaki and Georges Duarte for further sessions. She will next see them on July 12 and their progress note can be located in file HULK #8 at that time.

Psy D. Candidate Tim Stevens is a Staff Therapist used to have a Hulk-like alter ego named the Raging Skull. It mostly just got him in trouble.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Blake Garris

Oshie Bichar and Taylor Lumley of the band Beartooth stop by Marvel HQ to talk about their music, their comic book collections and much more.

Download episode #291.5 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check out Marvel Podcast Central, grab the TWiM RSS feed and subscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes or Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel including our latest episode!

This Week in Marvel focuses on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releasesfrom comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Tuesday and Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan Agent M Penagos and Editorial Director of Marvel Digital Media Ben Morse with Manager, Video & Content Production: Blake Garris, Editor Marc Strom, and Assistant Editor Christine Dinh. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes! Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to @AgentM, @BenJMorse, @blakegarris or @Marvel with the hashtag #ThisWeekinMarvel!

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Amanda Ames

After falling prey to the siren song of an old flame, Rocket starts back down the not so righteous path of stealing from the rich and, well, keeping it for himself mostly. But he gets played by a pretty face and ends up trapped deep within the bowels of the Colon where the clock winds down. Can he escape before the metaphoricalor possibly literalcrap hits the fan?

ROCKET #3 takes us inside one of the worst penitentiaries space has to offer on July 12 and we spoke with writer Al Ewing to give you all the lay of the land before setting off on this daring escape mission.

Marvel.com: Give us a quick run down of The Colon, what its like on the inside, how Rocket ended up there and why its called that?

Al Ewing: Im so glad you asked me this question. What is it like, inside The Colon? In the hot, cramped confines of The Colon? How did Rocket end up in The Colon? Some would say that, in a real sense, Rocket entered The Colon the moment I began work on the character. Anyway, to answer your question: The Colon is a dark place, where the squeeze is on and something somewhere stinks. Theres a network of tough guys therea ring of muscle, if you willand Rocket has to navigate the twists and turns of The Colon in order to escape through the rear exit. Its very much a bum note in his life.

Anyway, its named after the punctuation mark, clearly.

Marvel.com: Rockets been behind bars before; how does this joint stack up to other prisons and how is he handling life on the inside? What does he miss most?

Al Ewing: Silly name aside, this ones pretty grim. Its owned by a big corporation, and the shareholders like it when the prisoners are brutally and inhumanely punished; theres a lot of prison shouldnt be a holiday camp thinking in the richer parts of space. The prisoners are put to work making the space equivalent of license plates all dayand if they dont, they go to The Hole, which is basically a pay-per-view gladiatorial arena that makes money for the prison through illegal gambling. Oh yeah, and every prisoner has a punishment implant attached to them that can deliver pain in various different ways for the most minor infractions. Its a hellhole, essentially.

Marvel.com: Im sure Rocket is already coming up with an escape planwhat can you tell us about it and how does the execution of said plan go?

Al Ewing: At first, Rockets keeping his head down, getting the lay of the landbut then he learns that theres a deadline, and if he doesnt break out immediately, hes screwed. So the countdown is on, and it involves taking everything The Colon throws at him and turning it into an asset. We put all the puzzle pieces in place, and then we watch Rocket put them together. Not that his escape is a certainty; its well within my power to have him get all the way to the end, get a stroke of bad luck, and end up in an even worse situation. Maybe Ill do that, maybe I wontIm a capricious god.

Marvel.com: Does Rocket have any help/meet anyone while hes there? Any interesting new characters to tease?

Al Ewing: Well, this might be the sensational character find of 2017: Rockets cellmate, Gasbag, a living sentient gas in a kind of rubber gimp suit. Also we have the usual complement of alien creatures, all with their own laws, customs, and bodily functions and all wonderfully illustrated by Adam Gorham.

Marvel.com: If Rocket taught Prison Life 101 what would be on the syllabus? What are Rockets three rules for surviving the slammer?

Al Ewing: As we see in the issue, Rockets first rule is to learn the lay of the land and find out the individual peculiarities of this particular hoosegow. Learn who his friends are, learn who his enemies are, learn the routines. Somewhere in that knowledge is the map to the exit.

The second rule is to make sure you get the top bunk. Thats the plum position in any cell. Norman Stanley Fletcher had the top bunk. Seriously, Rocket will fight you.

And the third rule is that there are no rules! Psyche!

Marvel.com: What is your favorite scene in issue #3?

Al Ewing: Well, without spoiling too much, theres a wonderful bit that happens in the vacuum of space. Again, Adams work is superlative here; he really conveys the feeling of weightlessness, the terror of being in airless space with only a very fragile means of survival. Another favorite bit is when Rocket has an exchange with an old lag, a wizened inmate with vital information on the prison setup; Adam draws a wonderful rhinoceros person, which I think readers will probably end up falling it love with.

Marvel.com: Is there anything you can tease about whats in store for our furry weapons crazed friend?

Al Ewing: Well, from here, hes meeting up with a very special guest staryour friend and mine, Deadpooland together, theyre going to get deep into the gangster life, with tommy guns, bursting out of cakes, and a heist aimed at a particularly vicious space mobster. Adam wanted a space Kingpinand I put my thinking cap on and gave him one thatll hopefully be a presence in Marvel Space for a little while to come.

Be sure to catch all the face palming, snarky remark making, prison life action in ROCKET #3 out July 12, written by Al Ewing with art by Adam Gorham!

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Steffi Feldman

The time-displaced original Children of the Atom make up the X-Men Blue team, with Jean Grey, Cyclops, Beast, Angel, and Iceman working alongside their former archenemy Magneto. While its hard enough adjusting to a new era, these kids and their formerly villainous ally now also have a Secret Empire to contend with.

Where to even start?

We asked X-MEN: BLUE writer Cullen Bunn about issue #7, available July 12!

Marvel.com: First off, how has writing X-MEN: BLUE been different from some of the other X-Men projects youve worked on before?

Cullen Bunn: Its interesting, because I was writing UNCANNY X-MEN and when I got the call that we were going to be shifting over to X-MEN: BLUE and it would be the original five time lost characters. Ive been pretty honest with thismy first reaction was not overjoyed. Because as much as I love those characters, theyre not what I would consider my X-Men. Like, they werent from the era that I really got into X-Men. So I was a little hesitant! I wasnt sure I was the right guy to write the book.

As I started writing those characters, though, and putting them through the stories Id been planning on telling, Ive become more and more excited about them. Im glad that this is the team Im writing, because they have a completely different dynamic and viewpoint on the world; Im able to tell kind of classic X-Men adventures and uncanny adventures. Ive come to really love writing these characters now.

Marvel.com: You kind of got to make them your own, then! So, now that were all nice and emotionally invested in these guys, how will the Secret Empire affect them?

Cullen Bunn: Well, without giving too much awayas weve seen in SECRET EMPIRE, California has been ceded to mutants as a new mutant homeland. On the surface, that looks great! Its an opportunity for mutants and homo sapiens to live in peace together. But, as well find in X-MEN: BLUE, thats not necessarily playing out the way its supposed to. Its definitely a situation where we have mutants in power and that power is sort of a corrupting force. It plays to X-Men Blue for a number of reasons.

First of all, Magnetowhos acting as sort of a mentor for the X-Menhas said recently that he does not believe the idea of a mutant utopia works. Hes seen it backfire in horrible ways time and time again, and he keeps getting drawn back into that, lured into this idea of a mutant paradise; it is a dream [of his], but now he doesnt think that dream will ever come true. He thinks that a place like New Tian is a disaster waiting to happen, and he wants no part of it from that perspective.

We have also seen, however, that Magneto and the X-Men Blue team have a beef with Emma Frost and Sebastian Shaw and certain characters that are entrenched in this new mutant regime. And what were gonna see in X-MEN: BLUE is the new X-Men team almost as a rebel force at work inside New Tian.

Marvel.com: Will the Blue team take on the larger Secret Empire plotlines as well?

Cullen Bunn: Theres definitely some parallels with whats happening in New Tian and whats going on in the Marvel Universe as a whole, but I wanted to focus on it mainly from a mutant perspective. Again, without giving away too many spoilers, theres a villain that shows up in these issues who I feel has a direct correlation with whats going on with Steve Rogers and is cut from very similar cloth story-wise and we definitely lean into that to shore up those parallels even more.

Marvel.com: Thats so cool! It sort of unifies the different threads of the Marvel Universe narratively, like, a microcosm? Or even just winking at another storyline thats happening.

Cullen Bunn: Yeah! The goal with these tie-ins for me is always that a reader can continue reading X-MEN: BLUE and not get thrown off too much by the events of the Marvel Universe. But this is such a big event! Things are changing in such monumental ways, theres no way to [avoid it]. But I wanted to make sure that were seeing [that] story from a distinctively mutant point of view while not ignoring whats going on in the world at large.

Marvel.com: So lets talk Magneto. How is such a powerful character fitting into all this Secret Empire hubbub? Is he joining, holding back, fighting against it?

Cullen Bunn: We talked a lot about Magneto early on in the discussion about whats going on in the world of Secret Empire and really, Magneto seems to be sitting this one out. For reasons of his own, he has struck a bargain that hes just going to sit this one out and not interfere, and hes agreed to that.

However.

The X-Men team is there in New Tian, and theyre obviously not just sitting back. Now, then the question will comeare they working on Magnetos orders or against what Magneto wants? As the tie-in goes on I think theres even a question posed like, dont you think Magneto would have prepared for this? And we see some pretty big changes among the team itself as some of those contingencies begin to come into play.

Marvel.com: So it might be that he has something up his sleeve?

Cullen Bunn: Well, Magneto always has something up his sleeve. I think were gonna have come interesting interactions. Hes definitely taking a back seat in this tie-in and you dont see him getting a lot of [face] time, but his actions are pretty important to the story and theyll shape the X-Men Blue team after this event. And when we do finally see Magneto, I think we have an interesting interaction between Magneto and Steve Rogers in the arc that Im pretty excited about.

Marvel.com: I know that youve been writing Magneto for a while, so Im sure youll do him justice. After all, you know him pretty wellyou guys are on, like, a first-name basis.

Cullen Bunn: [Laughs] I do kind of feel like I have a handle on where hes coming from and how he would see whats been going on in the world, but I also know that Magnetohe knows that, if he disagrees with this, its not something he can go into with guns blazing, so to speak, because that would fail. Hes got to be a little cagier about what hes doing.

Marvel.com: How is the team reacting to this pseudo-utopia? Like, how are they taking it?

Cullen Bunn: Well, theyre not taking it well. [Laughs] Its not going well for them. Its a weird situation for them because heres this place that should be a safe haven for mutants and yet they find themselves struggling against that very ideal.

In fact, Ive often said that, to some degree, the world that theyre in right now? The New Tian mutant utopia is almost like their Days of Futures Past. They are seeing the world theyve always been afraid theyd see happen, but they never expected these threats and these dangers to be coming from a mutant source to the degree that it is.

As well get into the first issue, were seeing the X-Men dealing with mutants whove been imprisoned and who are scheduled for psychic reconditioning because they dont support the law of the land. Thats the kind of thing that scares the hell out of them, and they just cant sit back and let it happen.

See how it all plays out this summer in X-MEN BLUE #7 by Cullen Bunn and Cory Smith, available July 12.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Chris Baker

We all know that the first Star Wars film changed the face of pop culture forever when it hit theaters 40 years ago todaybut its not just the movie thats celebrating that milestone in 2017. Star Wars comics arrived with force in 1977, and hundreds of issues later, theyre more popular now than ever.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of Star Wars, were looking back at our 40 favorite moments from the history of comics from a galaxy far, far awayone day at a time.

STAR WARS INFINITIES: A NEW HOPE #1 kicks off with a scenario we know all too well: As Han Solo shouts, Lets blow this thing and go home!, Luke Skywalker trusts in the Force, firing two proton torpedoes into the Death Stars exhaust port. From there, the mighty battle stationdoesnt blow up? Unfortunately for Luke and the Rebel Alliance, one of the torpedoes detonated prematurely, only damaging the Death Star rather than destroying itand the Star Wars saga as we know it completely changes from that point on. Welcome to STAR WARS INFINITIESessentially the What If? comics of the Star Wars galaxy.

For four issues INFINITIES: A NEW HOPE twists everything we know about the events to follow, managing a healthy balance of new content and familiarity. Obi-Wan instructs Luke to head to Dagobah to train with Yoda, for example, but this happens right away, with Han and Chewbacca along for the trip to the swamp planet. And what happens when Darth Vader turns his attention to tempting Leia to the dark side instead of Luke? It all ends with a showdown between brother and sister, while Yoda takes the matter of destroying the Death Star into his own hands.

And if thats not enough alternate-galaxy Star Wars for you, this series was followed up with STAR WARS INFINITIES: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, where Luke freezes to death on Hoth, and STAR WARS INFINITIES: RETURN OF THE JEDI, where Leias thermal detonator accidentally explodes in Jabbas Palace.

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Ben Morse

Tons of new titles hit Marvel Unlimited this June! Medusa and Storm rally their troops in INHUMANS VS. X-MEN! Hellfire and Brimstone is that Robbie Reyes as the new GHOST RIDER? Carol Danvers commands Alpha Flight as the MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL! Guardians GAMORA and STAR-LORD take off in their own series! And while Kate Bishop: HAWKEYE becomes Los Angeles ace archer, Richard Rider returns to the cosmos in NOVA! To top it off? DOCTOR APHRA, Darth Vaders rogue archeologist, begins her solo quest for rare artifacts and this time shes ditching the Sith!

Week of 6/5

BLACK WIDOW #8 DEADPOOL: BACK IN BLACK #4 EXTRAORDINARY X-MEN #16 GHOST RIDER #1 GREAT LAKES AVENGERS #2 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #14 IVX #0 MS. MARVEL #13 NEW AVENGERS #18 OLD MAN LOGAN #14 STAR WARS ANNUAL #2 THE TOTALLY AWESOME HULK #12 THUNDERBOLTS #7 UNCANNY INHUMANS #16

Week of 6/12

ALL-NEW WOLVERINE #15 AVENGERS #2 CHAMPIONS #3 DEADPOOL #23 MOON KNIGHT #9 NOVA #1 SCARLET WITCH #13 SPIDER-MAN 2099 #18 STAR WARS: DOCTOR APHRA #1 THE CLONE CONSPIRACY #3 THE UNWORTHY THOR #2

Week of 6/19

ALL-NEW X-MEN #16 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: RENEW YOUR VOWS #2 DAREDEVIL #14 DEADPOOL: BACK IN BLACK #5 DOCTOR STRANGE/PUNISHER: MAGIC BULLETS INFINITE COMIC #3 FOOLKILLER #2 GHOST RIDER X-MAS SPECIAL INFINITE COMIC #1 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #15 GWENPOOL HOLIDAY SPECIAL: MERRY MIX-UP #1 HAWKEYE #1 IVX #1 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS: ULTRON REVOLUTION #6 MOSAIC #3 OLD MAN LOGAN #15 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST #11 SILK #15 SPIDER-MAN #10 STAR WARS: POE DAMERON #9 THE TOTALLY AWESOME HULK #13 THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #15 UNCANNY AVENGERS #17

Week of 6/26

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #22 AVENGERS #2.1 BLACK PANTHER: WORLD OF WAKANDA #2 CAGE! #3 CAPTAIN AMERICA: SAM WILSON #16 DEADPOOL & THE MERCS FOR MONEY #6 DOCTOR STRANGE #15 GAMORA #1 GWENPOOL, THE UNBELIEVABLE #9 INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #2 MARVEL UNIVERSE GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #15 OCCUPY AVENGERS #2 PATSY WALKER, A.K.A. HELLCAT! #13 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST: SWEET CHRISTMAS ANNUAL #1 SILVER SURFER #8 SLAPSTICK INFINITE COMIC #3 SOLO #3 SPIDER-GWEN #15 SQUADRON SUPREME #14 STAR-LORD #1 STAR WARS: DOCTOR APHRA #2 THANOS #2 THE MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 THE PUNISHER #7 ULTIMATES 2 #2 UNCANNY X-MEN #16 VENOM #2

Published Jun 6, 2017 By Tj Dietsch

The beauty of Tom King, Gabriel Hernandez Walta and Jordie Bellaires VISION continues to inspire and impress. Though the series launched about two years ago, the six-issue VISION DIRECTORS CUT limited series will remind existing readers of that goodness while also bringing in new fans. Each DIRECTORS CUT issue features two of the original books, plus plenty of in-depth, behind-the-scenes info.

Last month we talked with Walta about bringing the story to life and now were chatting up Bellaire about building a color scheme that not only went a bold new direction, but also made reference to the past while taking intriguing twists and turns, especially during flashbacks.

Marvel.com: Classic Vision has this bright, bold color scheme. I want to say that the version in VISION is more muted and deep, but am not sure if thats the right terminology! How would you compare the two palettes?

Jordie Bellaire: I think Visions newest look is dictated mostly by Gabriel Waltas beautiful use of washes combined with new creative technology for more understated and subtle coloring in programs like Photoshop. As a team, we werent forced into using what was available to us at the time of classic Vision which was only bright, selective colors. We could go there if we wanted to, like the flashbacks, but we were allowed the freedom to tell a story with a range of color and techniques.

Marvel.com: Did it take a while to nail down this new color scheme during the design process?

Jordie Bellaire: Not really; I think having already worked with Gabriel Walta on great books like MAGNETO we were prepared for what it was like together as a team. We think a lot alike. We both take great inspiration from films, for instance the Coen Brothers have come up a few times in the past few years that weve worked together because of their excellent use in simplicity of composition and color design.

Tom King was also just a dream to work with and is extremely hands off in the coloring process. He allows me to be as loud or restrained as Id like, trusting that Im working in service of his story and the artwhich Id like to think I am and did!

Marvel.com: From a color and texture perspective, this book feels very different from most super hero books. Where does that come from?

Jordie Bellaire: Again, I think this is really dictated by the genius that is Gabriel Walta. He is incredibly unique. I congratulate Marvel for hiring him on high-profile books that, 35 years ago, he maybe would havent had the opportunity to do. His art is what makes this book such a success, combined again with Toms impeccable storytelling. It makes it fairly easy to get in and do my job since I respect the two as artists so much. Creatively, everything was brought to the table and we all sat at that table, taking on each others strengths and leveling them up each issue.

Marvel.com: You went with more themed colors during the flashbacks of Agatha Harkness, Victor, and Virginia. How was it figuring out those visual dynamics?

Jordie Bellaire: These flashbacks were some of my favorite things to do. Agatha, the story of a ghost that finds the future in blood, Virginia and the others Visions have flashbacks that echo to their iconic skin color and yellow energylike the memory of a droid, mechanical and scratchy. And lastly, Victor, half human and half droid, the yellow is peppered throughout a world of blue, hes in the center somewhere between Agatha and the Visions. These sorts of things arent planned incredibly well in advance but I do like to think on them as I see the art and digest the story. Thankfully, Tom wove such a well-told story that it all comes together and color pushes the themes home even further still.

Marvel.com: What do you think it was about this book that resonated so much with so many people?

Jordie Bellaire: This book is a tragedy. Its a book about normalcy and the tragedy that is normalcy and the desire to belong. I think this resonates with many people as I think many of us secretly feel this way. The need to fit in, to be loved, to be respected but to be yourself and be true to that self. Its an extremely deep and heavy work that in the current climate of super hero books, really stepped into the emotional darkness many didnt quite expect. It deals so much with the human condition and what is a human condition, stories like that will live on forever and continuously be told as were fascinated about truly connecting to each other and to ourselves.

VISION DIRECTORS CUT #1 by Tom King, Gabriel Hernandez Walta and Jordie Bellaire phases in on June 14 with the second issue following on July 12.

Published Jun 2, 2017 By Christine Dinh

Weve got a brand new episode of This Week in Marvel, presented by Loot Crate, to help you kick off the weekend!

Ryan and Ben give you the rundown on this weeks comics hottest releases including SECRET EMPIRE, MOON KNIGHT, CABLE and more! Weve also got tons of comics news from Tom Brevoortand Alanna Smith(49:23); West Coast news from Marc, Christine with your weekly dose of Marvel Games and Marvel Animation (1:14:21); and both coasts diveinto the 90s-tastic world of X-Cutioners Song Pt. 1 with our Unlimited Reading Club (1:21:13)! Its all here on a funky fresh episode of the official Marvel podcast!

Be sure to join our #TWIMURC next time where we have both coasts tackle X-Cutioners Song Pt. 2! Share your thoughts with us using the hashtag #TWIMURC!

Loot Crate has assembled the Marvel Gear and Goods crate for the ultimate Marvel fan. This crate features official Marvel items like collectible home goods, apparel and more every other month! If anyone knows the importance of downtime, its Peter Parker, Miles Morales, Gwen Stacy, Jessica Drew and their Wall-Crawling peers. Unwind after a hard day with denizens of the SPIDER-VERSE! Order your own Marvel Gear and Goods crate by heading to lootcrate.com/MarvelGear and use promo code MARVELPOD to save $3 on your subscription today.

Download episode #292 of This Week in Marvel from Marvel.com, check outMarvel Podcast Central,grab the TWiM RSS feedandsubscribe to This Week in Marvel on iTunes, so you never miss an episode! We are now also on Soundcloud! Head over now to our new hub to listen to the full run of This Week in Marvel!

This Week in Marvel will focus on delivering all the Marvel info on news and new releasesfrom comics to video games to toys to TV to film and beyond! New episodes will be released every Thursday (or so) and TWiM is co-hosted by Marvel VP & Executive Editor of Digital Media Ryan Agent M Penagos and Marvel Editorial Director of Digital Media Ben Morse, along with Marvel.com Editor Marc Strom, Marvel.com Assistant Editor Christine Dinh, and Manager of Video & Content Production Blake Garris. We also want your feedback, as well as questions for us to answer on future episodes! Tweet your questions, comments and thoughts about TWiM to@AgentM,@BenJMorse, @chrissypediaor@Marvelwith the hashtag#ThisWeekinMarvel!

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Psych Ward: The Hulk - Marvel (press release) (registration) (blog)

Utopia lost: Man wants Berrien ‘town’ on the map – Valdosta Daily Times

UTOPIA Phil Jones wants to put Utopia on the map.

For 45 years, Jones has been the unofficial mayor of this unincorporated Berrien County community.

Unlike several other unincorporated Berrien communities, such as New Lois and Cottle, Utopia is not named on county maps.

Partly because some of the other communities were named a century or more ago. They are part of the historic fabric of Berrien County but Jones claims so is Utopia.

On March 28, 1972, Jones, his parents and neighbors were walking backroads through their neighborhood which is a short distance north of Nashville, the county seat.

They decided to name their community. They chose the name Utopia. They viewed their "town" as a "quiet, peaceful place."

Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines utopia as:1. an imaginary and indefinitely remote place;2.often capitalized: a place of ideal perfection especially in laws, government and social conditions;3.an impractical scheme for social improvement.

For Jones, his hopes for his community and the reality of Utopia's status, all three definitions fit.

He was 15 years old in 1972. He took the concept of Utopia seriously. Jones constructed signs reading "Utopia: Population 41," for example. He fixed the signs to denote population changes for decades. He affixes the signs to posts marking the unofficial boundaries of the mile-long stretch of the Enigma Road.

"How many 15-year-olds do something like this?" Jones said.

He named several dirt roads for community families, such as Griner Lane, Rogers Street, Dale Avenue, and Christy Lane. He named Griner Lane for Joe Griner, a one-time resident who in his 80s and 90s, walked every day from Utopia to Nashville and back. The county later officially named three streets combined as Utopia Circle and kept Griner Lane.

As a youth, Jones worked a deal with Nashville leaders for old Christmas decorations. Jones put up decorations throughout Utopia each holiday season. Neighbors gave him permission to place decorations on his property but no one ever helped him.

Jones said he has always worked alone for Utopia.

He was already referred to as the mayor as early as the mid-1970s, according to a Feb. 22, 1976, article in The Valdosta Daily Times. Even then, Jones was considered the lone advocate of Utopia.

He was a student enrolled at Young Harris College then. The 1976 article noted, "Utopia is not the same when Mayor Phil Jones is gone."

When he became an educator, when he moved away from Berrien County the "mayor" has not lived in Utopia for years,he still returns to install new signs. He's had signs made that resemble official town signs with white lettering on a green backdrop.

Now, Jones wants to see Utopia added to Berrien County maps.He wants to see the community listed on Wikipedia; past media reports in newspapers and television even a salute on the old syndicated "Hee-Haw" show are 30 to 40 years ago, prior to the internet reports required to validate a Wikipedia entry.

He's created a Facebook account supporting Utopia, remembering past residents, and pushing for its inclusion on maps and Wikipedia.

With the recent passing of the 45th anniversary of the walk that named the community, why now?

The one-time boy mayor is pushing 60. He's a retired teacher who worked with at-risk students. He spends half a year living in South Georgia and the other half living in North Carolina.

He sees time slipping away. He sees Utopia lost.

"I loved growing up in Utopia," Jones said. "But I'm not getting any younger. I want to see Utopia last beyond me."

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Utopia lost: Man wants Berrien 'town' on the map - Valdosta Daily Times

Stellaris: Utopia review | PC Gamer – PC Gamer

Need to know

What is it? Spacebound grand strategy with 4X elements. Or is it a 4X with grand strategy elements? Expect to pay $20/15 Developer Paradox Development Studio Publisher Paradox Interactive Reviewed on Windows 10 64-bit, Core i7-4770K, 16GB RAM, GeForce GTX 1070 Multiplayer Up to 32 Players Online (Steam) Link Official site

When Stellaris launched almost a year ago, its biggest void wasn't space itself, but its relatively challenge-light mid-game, especially regarding internal politics. Utopia attempts to enliven player empires, and force interesting choices in between the initial phase of wonder and exploration and the climactic finale when scripted endgame crises bring it all together. It attacks this problem with new political mechanics, a bunch of exciting late game goals that dont involve waiting for a robot rebellion to happen, and sweeping, feedback-informed reworks of core systems. It may be the studios largest and most transformative expansion yet, which is saying something. Yet some of the additions feel as underdeveloped as areas of Stellaris were at launch.

Alongside the 1.5 patch, Utopia rethinks just about everything relating to building and managing your stellar empire internally. Gone are set government types like Plutocratic Oligarchy and Enlightened Monarchy. In their place is a more versatile and interesting system where you chose an authority type (Democracy, Oligarchy, Dictatorship, or hereditary Empire), and then build on that with two starting civics (a third can later be unlocked with society tech) like Police State and Philosopher King to create a custom government that does exactly what you want it to. The type of government you create will influence how likely the population units ('Pops') scattered across your planets are to adopt certain viewpoints, such as Militarism, Spiritualism, or Xenophobia. As ethics used to be assigned to Pops semi-randomly, this system gives you a lot more of an active role in influencing your people.

This feeds into what I think is Utopias best feature: the new Faction system. Pops that follow a common ethos are now likely to found factions (such as Xenophiles starting an Alien Rights Movement, or Pacifists demanding an end to costly wars), with one of your existing governors, scientists, or military officers becoming the leader. Each faction has a list of agenda items, and depending on how many of them are fulfilled (or blatantly ignored), the faction will establish a happiness value that applies to all Pops who are part of that faction. Not only does displeasing factions potentially tank the happiness of a large base of your citizens, but keeping them very happy will grant you Influence that can be spent on useful edicts across the empire.

If you want to build a giant Dyson sphere around a sun to steal all of its energy and make any planets that depended on it freeze to death, you can do that.

The upshot of all of this is that internal politics actually feel interesting and participatory, which was a major weakness of Stellaris at launch. In one campaign, the two most powerful factions in my empire were the conservative religious bloc and a profit-driven party of business moguls. They usually werent directly at odds, but fulfilling all of the agendas to satisfy both of them required me to do some serious juggling of my usual playstyle. If I started to neglect one or the other, I would see the effects on my bottom line, just as Id bask in the benefits when I managed to keep everyone happy. Its a big, big step towards making Stellaris more interesting in the mid game, and giving you challenges to contend with that dont involve blowing up spaceships.

The flashier, more attention-grabbing new features dont slack either. Using a new resource called Unity, empires can progress down Civ 5-style Tradition trees. The perks in these trees each provide big, thematic bonuses when fully completed, as well as granting you an Ascension Perk, which is where things get really crazy. If you want to upload your entire population into robot bodies, you can do that. If you want to build a giant Dyson sphere around a sun to steal all of its energy and make any planets that depended on it freeze to death, you can do that. If you want to genetically modify your species to have 400 babies, you can do that. Theres nothing stopping you besides earning enough Unity. And while Unity can feel like one too many extra currencies to juggle in a game that already has minerals, energy, food, influence, three types of science, and strategic resources, the perks it provides are an effective way to guide your playstyle through the early and mid game, building towards some exciting, new toys in the late game.

My favorite of these Ive come across so far is The Shroud. A parallel realm accessible by a conclave of psychics once youve unlocked the highest tier of the Psionic ascension path, most interactions are text-based and relegated to the diplomatic menu but its effects in the game world can be quite tangible. At one point, my telepaths were given the chance to manifest a psychic entity of great power into a physical avatar that could fight with my fleets in battle. Some of the other events are worth not spoiling, but suffice to say, galaxy-changing. However, most of these short, choose-your-own-adventure interactions essentially culminate in a dice roll. There doesnt seem to be any way to affect the result, and it often felt underwhelming to be asked to gamble for a tiny, tiny chance of something really cool, or settling for a somewhat higher chance of something significantly less cool.

One other issue with ascension is that you have to progress through all seven of the Tradition trees to unlock all the perk slots. When I was playing a race of killer bugs that quite literally ate everyone they met, I was pretty excited to complete the first few. Heres one that lets me kill people better. Heres one that lets me spread my broods to new worlds faster. But in order to unlock those last few perk slots, I had to spend points on the Diplomatic Tradition tree, which had nothing even remotely useful for genocidal insects shunning friendship and spreading terror through the stars. Part of the appeal is specialization and distinguishing your civilization further, so it seems odd that everyone is going to eventually end up with all the traditions, and it somewhat cheapens the choice you have to make between them initially.

My favorite of these Ive come across so far is The Shroud. A parallel realm accessible by a conclave of psychics.

There are a few other features that give this same impression. For example, you can now play as a hive mind species that doesnt use happiness, doesnt start factions, and is ruled by an immortal consciousness that can be everywhere at once. In theory, it sounds absolutely awesome. In practice, its a little awkward. For one thing, when creating your own single-minded swarm, you can get a refund on some trait points by picking a negative trait that gives you -5% happiness even though hive minds dont use happiness. Very little of the event text has been altered to account for hive minds, so youll still get notifications about how the new aliens you just met are being portrayed in the media. Perhaps most significantly, without happiness or factions, hive mind play is basically electing to turn the best parts of the expansion off. Its a really cool idea, but it doesn't feel totally integrated with all aspects of the game.

When it stumbles, Utopia stumbles in the same way vanilla Stellaris did: introducing new ideas that have a lot of potential, but clearly arent quite ready for prime time. However, where it succeeds is in fleshing out a lot of those areas that felt imperfect at launch. The changes to Pops, governments, and factions have me designing new empires in my head and wanting to sink another hundred-something hours into this universe. I didnt come close to scratching the surface of all the endgame ascension paths in the time Ive had so far, but the ones I have seen make me excited to discover more. Utopia may not deliver on all the promises and expectations Stellaris is tied up in, but it does bring it one, giant leap closer.

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Stellaris: Utopia review | PC Gamer - PC Gamer

Why Open Borders Would Strengthen Our Economy | The Huffington … – Huffington Post

Why do you think open borders are a good idea? originally appeared on Quora - the place to gain and share knowledge, empowering people to learn from others and better understand the world.

A mountain of scientific evidence shows that immigration is the most powerful weapon we have in the fight against global poverty. Four different studies have shown that, depending on the level of movement in the global labor market, the estimated growth in gross worldwide product would be in the range of 67% to 147%. Effectively, open borders would make the whole world twice as rich.

I understand that arguing in favor of immigration is not going to make you very popular these days. But as a historian, its easy to see that immigration is one of the most important drivers of prosperity in world history - from the Roman Empire to the United States. And many of the arguments against it (theyll take our jobs, they are too lazy to work, theyre all criminals - etc.) are factually incorrect.

Immigrants are often very productive and entrepreneurial and are actually job creators. People making a new life in the U.S. commit fewer offenses and less frequently end up in prison than the native population. Immigration has virtually no effect on the wages of the native population. Theres no evidence that immigrants are more likely to apply for assistance than native citizens. In reality, if you correct for income and job status, immigrants take less advantage of the welfare state.

Obviously, you cant win this debate by just churning out facts like these. Its really important to develop a different story around immigration. A country that is proud of itself, of its own heritage and traditions, a country that doesnt lack self-confidence will also be open to others.

Its the same with individuals: if youre confident of who you are, you will be open to new experiences. But if youre insecure, dont know who you are and where you want to go, you will probably be hostile to others as well. It doesnt surprise me that theres a rise in xenophobia and right-wing populism in a time when the centre has no ideology anymore, no new utopian visions.

This is why I wrote my book Utopia for Realists: weve achieved a lot in the past, but the problem today is that we dont know where to go next. Its time for a new Utopia for the 21st century.

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Why Open Borders Would Strengthen Our Economy | The Huffington ... - Huffington Post

Best of the Week: Focal Utopia, Sonos Playbase, Sgt. Pepper reissue, new 4K Xbox and more – What Hi-Fi?

This week there are more details on Microsoft's Project Scorpio 4K console, Apple Corps and Universal Music detailed a huge reissue of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and LG has shown off its home cinema line-up for 2017, including the SJ9 Dolby Atmos capable soundbar.

In reviews, we have Focal's Utopia headphones, a soundbar alternative in Sonos' Playbase and B&W's 805 D3 standmount speakers.

It's also new What Hi-Fi? week, with the May issue now on sale. There's plenty for any home cinema/hi-fi enthusiast with reviews of a Sony 4K TV, Blu-ray players under 100, a set-top box showdown between BT, Sky and Virgin and budget turntable fight between Audio Technica, Dual and Sony.

You can buy the issue from your local newsagent, subscribe or buy the digital versions on Android and iOS.

MORE: May 2017 issue on sale now!

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Best of the Week: Focal Utopia, Sonos Playbase, Sgt. Pepper reissue, new 4K Xbox and more - What Hi-Fi?

The post-Brexit fantasy of a utopia of flammable sofas – New Statesman

Brexit means Brexit. For nine months now, Ive been puzzling over this sentence. Theresa Mays later clarification that Brexit means leaving the single market and the jurisdiction of the European courts hasnt stopped the itch. What is Brexit, really? Whats the core of it, the essence the thing that has to happen for Brexit to have happened? Im not sure that triggering Article 50 is it, but a good test will be whether this simple act calms the hysterics of the sorest winners in history. What is it that the Brexiteers so fear will be snatched away from them? Surely no one feels this emotional about the possibility of a free trade deal with Canada.

I wonder if Brexit is a magic mirror, in which everyone sees what their heart most desires. For Nigel Farage, theres an end to mass immigration and a return to a Britain where Romanians dont live next door, hijabs have disappeared and only English is spoken on commuter trains to Kent. For some in the right-wing press, theres an end to all those slights and restrictions inflicted on our proud, independent nation by faceless bureaucrats and busybodies, even if these often turned out not to be quite as advertised, if not wholly made up. (In 1994, the Sun claimed that the EU had brought in standardised condom sizing that simply couldnt handle British manhood. This seems, shall we say, unlikely.)

But its the final group whose vision of Brexit should be most alarming, because its more subtle and thus harder to counter than Freudian laments about bendy bananas or straightforward, unabashed xenophobia. For some Eurosceptics, Brexit was a means, not an end: the first step to a different kind of economy. Call this what you want: a less humid (and less interventionist) Singapore, a tax haven with terrible weather, a place where red tape can be banished (read: where pettifogging luxuries such as statutory maternity leave are no longer interwoven with international obligations).

If this latter point sounds exaggerated, consider the Whitehall career of Steve Hilton, who was David Camerons blue sky thinker before moving to California to become a Silicon Valley sage, then returning last summer to detail the case for Brexit and show off his tan. In government, Hilton ran a red tape challenge, hoping to banish reams of dead weight from the statute books. Instead, as the former Liberal Democrat adviser Giles Wilkes records, weary civil servants had to defend basic safety measures: Only the determination of hardy officials saved the public from the return of flammable sofas.

Perhaps Hilton was unconvinced of the merits of red tape, even then. Perhaps our unwillingness to risk death from furniture-induced burns shows how unready Britons are to compete in the global marketplace. But the saga suggests the possibility that basic employment rights will soon receive the same treatment meted out to benefits and international aid, with every outlying example and every rare piss-taker used to damn the whole system. The left will find itself having to refight battles that it thought were long since won.

To a certain type of Tory, the answer to every problem is to shrink the state. So Brexit provides another opportunity for the new Bolsheviks such as Michael Gove to smash the bits of Whitehall that they dont like. (Gove kept a picture of Lenin in his office at the Department for Education as a semi-ironic reference to his revolutionary fervour.) It is no coincidence that the TaxPayers Alliance that scourge of public spending provided the intellectual ballast behind Vote Leave. When Philip Hammond said that he was ready to change our economic model to become a low-tax, low-regulation state if the rest of Europe played hardball during the Brexit negotiations, the Chancellor intended to deliver a threat. But some wish it were a promise.

There is only one problem. Only a fraction of the 52 per cent of people who voted Leave want any of this. You can tell because, during the referendum campaign, Boris Johnson began to fret earnestly about the bankers, as if he hadnt spent eight years as London mayor telling the City it shouldnt be at all apologetic about that rum business with the bailouts. Much was made of how immigration (allegedly) depresses wages.

Voting Leave was presented in protectionist, even left-wing terms: a vote for higher wages and stronger communities, a vote against London and its metropolitan elite. No one said: Oh, and by the way, well make it easier for you to be sacked. Or: Have you ever tasted salmonella? Its delicious! Or: We send 350m a week to the EU. Lets spend it on bribing companies to stay here after we leave the single market instead. Brexit was sold as a route to a better life for ordinary workers, not a chance to cast off the shackles of the welfare state and buccaneer into a utopia of Randian self-reliance.

Thats why I find the sullen, boorish machismo of Farage and Arron Banks less dispiriting than the smooth-tongued sales patter of the liberal Leavers. At least Farage is open about what he is and what he wants. Some high priests of Euroscepticism chunter endlessly about sovereignty to mask a libertarian agenda for which they know there is no public appetite.

The competing priorities of these two right-wing visions will define the politics of the next decade. Brexit was not the end of an era. It was just the beginning.

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The post-Brexit fantasy of a utopia of flammable sofas - New Statesman