Freud and Football Manager
Football Manager is a big deal. It has been a contributing factor in dozens of divorce cases. It has been the subject of two films and has had a best-selling book written about the lives it has...
View ArticleGetting Shirty: Cameron’s Suit, Fresh Meat and Magical Realism
In a week where Corbyn was blasted by Cameron for the cheap appearance of his suit, it is interesting that a reference to the importance of one’s suit in a fictional Channel 4 TV programme has gone...
View ArticleDrones, Panopticism, and Ossuaries
Whilst not so very long ago the notion of the drone evoked a sense of foreboding not unlike that which accompanies the digestion of a Phillip K. Dick’s Minority Report, or a revisiting of Fritz Lang’s...
View ArticleNEW SITE – MASSIVE ERRORS
This is day 1 of the new EDA website – please bare with us. We know its full of errors – time will correct it! Cheers Alfie and Dan
View ArticleBoaty McBoatface and the need for Civil Disobedience
“You’re gonna need a bigger boat” – Martin Brody – Jaws (1975) When the British Natural Environment Research Council asked the general public to participate in an act of engagement to help decide the...
View ArticlePolitactics
Pleased to share with you the cover of our forthcoming book Politactics: Political Conversations from Everyday Analysis, which is in production now and will be released later in the year. The book is...
View ArticleHow Soon is Now? Interpellation and Pop Misery
At the risk of over-simplification, the French Marxist Louis Althusser’s development of his theory of ‘interpellation’ is incredibly useful for understanding the extent to which our subjectivity—or the...
View ArticleSpace Cowboy Capitalism: The Martian
“Satellite’s gone, way up to Mars, Soon it will be filled with parking cars” -Lou Reed, Satellite of Love In his lecture at the end of The Martian, Mark Watney tells a theatre full of aspiring,...
View ArticleHEGEL AND NYAN CAT
As an April Fool’s joke in 2013, after eight years in existence, YouTube posted a video announcing that they would finally be choosing the ultimate winner of YouTube and that the fun was over. If only...
View ArticleFreud and Football Manager
Football Manager is a big deal. It has been a contributing factor in dozens of divorce cases. It has been the subject of two films and has had a best-selling book written about the lives it has...
View ArticleGetting Shirty: Cameron’s Suit, Fresh Meat and Magical Realism
In a week where Corbyn was blasted by Cameron for the cheap appearance of his suit, it is interesting that a reference to the importance of one’s suit in a fictional Channel 4 TV programme has gone...
View ArticleDrones, Panopticism, and Ossuaries
Whilst not so very long ago the notion of the drone evoked a sense of foreboding not unlike that which accompanies the digestion of a Phillip K. Dick’s Minority Report, or a revisiting of Fritz Lang’s...
View ArticleEveryday Analysis Quarterly Online Journal
Not seeing much activity on the Everyday Analysis home page? We’ve made a change in the way we’re doing things. Rather than operating like a traditional blog, we will now be publishing four issues of...
View ArticleCFP: POLITICS
Call-for-Papers This summer Everyday Analysis will publish an online collection of articles on the subject of Politics in attempt to expand the conversations in our forthcoming book Politactics, out...
View ArticleWhy There Is No Poststructuralism in France — HONG KONG REVIEW OF BOOKS
Jason Goldfarb review Johannes Angermuller’s new book on why critical theory hasn’t theorized its own naming and categorization. Johannes Angermuller, Why There Is No Poststructuralism in France: The...
View ArticleHKRB Essays: The Postmodernist Prince — HONG KONG REVIEW OF BOOKS
The Postmodernist Prince In a new HKRB Essays series R.M. Christofides argues that Prince was a truly postmodern artist, in the proper Lyotardian tense. Was Prince the first postmodern artist of...
View ArticleHow Soon is Now? Interpellation and Pop Misery
At the risk of over-simplification, the French Marxist Louis Althusser’s development of his theory of ‘interpellation’ is incredibly useful for understanding the extent to which our subjectivity—or the...
View ArticleSpace Cowboy Capitalism: The Martian
“Satellite’s gone, way up to Mars, Soon it will be filled with parking cars” -Lou Reed, Satellite of Love In his lecture at the end of The Martian, Mark Watney tells a theatre full of aspiring,...
View ArticleClosure of Everyday Analysis
It is with heavy hearts that after 3 and a half years we must announce the retirement of the Everyday Analysis project. For a great variety of reasons, Everyday Analysis has run its course and we want...
View ArticleHOW SOON IS NOW? INTERPELLATION AND POP MISERY
At the risk of over-simplification, the French Marxist Louis Althusser’s development of his theory of ‘interpellation’ is incredibly useful for understanding the extent to which our subjectivity—or the...
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