For a full table of contents, click here.
Subscribe here, or buy no. 62 as a single issue here.
Quench your thirst for all things lactic with:
–Melanie Jackson and Esther Leslie on the primal contradictions of milk
–Will Wiles on Bournville, the town that Cadbury’s milk chocolate built
–Sally O’Reilly on Silk Cashewmilk’s demoralizing disingenuousness
–Jeff Dolven on the moral ambivalence of milk in Hitchcock’s Suspicion
–Allen Ginsberg on the transmogrifying talents of Harry Smith
–And milk from Pauline Wayne, the last presidential cow
Then enjoy more of the crème de la crème with:
–Alice Butler on Cookie Mueller’s life in stories
–Eduardo Cadava and Xenia Vytuleva on musical X-ray records and Soviet dissidence
–Reconciliation, an artist project by S. Billie Mandle, introduced by George Prochnik
–Brian Dillon on a single sentence by Virginia Woolf
–Annie Julia Wyman on Mountbatten Pink
–Mats Bigert on the pleasures, and terrors, of the egg
–D. Graham Burnett on the arachnid origins of telescopic crosshairs
–Marta Figlerowicz on the temporalities of autocracy in Poland and the United States
–And the new installment of Kiosk, our quarterly notebook
Cabinet can be purchased through its online shop, as well as independent bookstores across the US and at chains such as Barnes & Noble, Hudson News, and Universal News. The magazine is also available in Canada, the UK, and more than 20 other countries around the world. A partial list of retailers worldwide can be found here.
Cabinet is published by Immaterial Incorporated, a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. Cabinet receives generous support from the Lambent Foundation, the Orphiflamme Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Opaline Fund, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Danielson Foundation, the Katchadourian Family Foundation, the Edward C. Wilson and Hesu Coue Wilson Family Fund, and many individuals.