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Fever as Method: On Tribulation 99 and the Venezuelan Kidnapping

From Cold War montage to contemporary capture, on the persistence of imperial form. Why intervention no longer argues its case, but edits it. “Nothing is lost if one has the courage to proclaim that all is lost and we must begin again.” — Julio Cortázar. Around the Day in Eighty Worlds.                          Translated by Thomas Christensen.…

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The Ethics of Staying: Béla Tarr and the Cinema of Endurance

Béla Tarr’s films transformed slowness into an ethical demand. Refusing narrative relief and political optimism, he made endurance of time, history, and looking the condition of cinema itself. “There is no way out.” —László Krasznahorkai, The Melancholy of Resistance, trans. George Szirtes (New York: New Directions, 1998), passim. There are filmmakers whose deaths feel…

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Kamber Chakar: The Revolutionary Who Embraced Death and Achieved Enduring Remembrance

"Even today, in difficult times, the movement’s ability to stand firm owes much to martyrs like Kamber Chakar. Without their ultimate sacrifice, future generations would not inherit such a strong spirit of resistance." —Darapshaan Baloch, former chairman, Baloch Students Organization (Azad), 2024 Kamber Chakar (1987–2011) remains one of the most iconic figures in Balochistan’s struggle…

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End of Islam?

Reading Faisal Devji’s Waning Crescent: The Rise and Fall of Global Islam, 280 Pages, 2025, that traces how Islam ceased to function as a political actor, why the Muselmann reveals the truth of our age, and what forms of Muslim agency may emerge once ideology dissolves and ethical life returns to the centre. For almost a…

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