Bungacast

Bungacast
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9 snips
Oct 21, 2025 • 36min

/516/ France's Two Peripheries: Riots and Insurrection ft. Fred Lyra

In this engaging discussion, Fred Lyra, a Parisian philosopher and musicologist, delves into France's political upheavals since 1995. He analyzes the significance of the 2005 riots, linking them to broader societal fractures and the normalization of urban violence. Lyra explores the duality of France's peripheries—racialized suburbs versus neglected smaller towns—highlighting an ironic excess of state presence in the former and a troubling absence in the latter. Their conversation touches on failed integration models and the shifting tides of protest movements from Nuits Debout to the Gilet Jaunes.
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14 snips
Oct 13, 2025 • 1h 14min

/515/ State Capitalism Is Now ft. Ilias Alami

Ilias Alami, a political economist and assistant professor at the University of Cambridge, dives into the dynamics of state capitalism. He argues this phenomenon isn't limited to China but reflects a global trend influenced by stagnation and neoliberal legacies. Alami discusses how state capitalism signals systemic fragility rather than strength. He explores its implications for domestic politics and the potential for democratic reclaiming of state assets, all while navigating through the complexities of current economic structures and their effects on future governance.
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13 snips
Oct 7, 2025 • 59min

/514/ The Expressway World ft. Richard Williams

Richard J Williams, a Professor of contemporary visual cultures at the University of Edinburgh, discusses his new book, The Expressway World. He explores how expressways influenced urban life, revealing why many despise them while others admire their utilitarian beauty. The conversation delves into class struggles, the tension between ecological initiatives and gentrified public spaces, and how expressways can reflect social inequalities. Williams highlights the complexity of these infrastructures, urging a nuanced understanding of modern cities.
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Sep 30, 2025 • 48min

/513/ Global Right: LATAM Division ft. Guilherme Casarões

Join Guilherme Casarões, an Associate Professor of Brazilian Studies and expert on the far right, as he delves into the fascinating interplay between Brazil and the U.S. He discusses Bolsonaro's sentencing and the strategic motives behind Trump's tariffs on Brazil, revealing limited economic rationale. Casarões highlights Eduardo Bolsonaro's role in connecting Latin America's radical right with MAGA. Explore how Bolsonarismo mirrors MAGA and what a potential Populist International Order might look like in today's political landscape.
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8 snips
Sep 26, 2025 • 26min

/512/ Reading Club: Middle-Class Dreams & Nightmares

The discussion dives into Göran Therborn's analysis of the world's middle classes, questioning the sustainability of middle-class dreams in a changing economic landscape. Is being middle-class defined by consumption rather than income? The hosts explore shifting fears of economic stagnation and the evolving role of political populism among middle-class communities. They also debate the impact of automation on white-collar jobs and whether the professional managerial class will define the 21st century.
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Sep 23, 2025 • 1h 19min

/511/ Britain's Tinderbox ft. Lisa McKenzie

On the UK's working-class unrest. Sociologist Lisa McKenzie talks to Alex and contributing editor Lee Jones about why the country feels like a powder-keg. What's behind protests like Unite the Kingdom? How responsible are far-right agitators? Why are threats posed to women and children such an explosive issue? What is the type of nationalism that is behind the proliferation of English and British flags? What are Farage's Reform promising and will they deliver? What of the immigration question? How is Corbyn's "Your Party" going, and why can't the Left seem to speak for or to the working class? Links: Getting By: Estates, Class and Culture in Austerity Britain, Lisa McKenzie, Bristol UP Lockdown Diaries of the Working Class, Lisa McKenzie James Treadwell thread on raising of flags, X
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Sep 16, 2025 • 26min

/510/ Couch Potatoes to Screen Sausages ft. Ryan Zickgraf

On critiques of entertainment. New contributing editor Ryan Zickgraf joins Alex and George to talk about the history of media critique and contemporary cases. How does consensus-age comedy like King of the Hill deal with hyperpolitics today? Is the reliance on archetypes a problem, or inherent to all comedy? Why is Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death still relevant? Is the Gen X critique of 'couch potatoes' and TV-watching similar to today's techlash? Have we become insensible to contradiction? Links: We’re still distracting ourselves to death, Ryan Zickgraf, UnHerd  King of the Hill reboot is ill-suited to the Trump age, Ryan Zickgraf, UnHerd
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Sep 9, 2025 • 1h 18min

/509/ The Revenge of Ethnic Chauvinism ft. Orlando Patterson

On slavery, racism, and the politics of freedom. Renowned sociologist Orlando Patterson talks to contributing editor Alex Gourevitch about themes brought up by his recent The Paradox of Freedom as well as his works as a whole. Why is the study of slavery too affected by the exceptional US American experience? In what way is violence a constitutive feature of slave relations that aren’t true of others? Are we still mired in a politics of ethnic chauvinism? What does it mean for ethnic minorities to engage in self-criticism? Is there a politics of freedom that is hopeful today or has it been eclipsed?
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Sep 2, 2025 • 1h 6min

RE-RELEASE: OK BUNGER! The Problem of Generations, 5

The fifth and final part of a series on generational consciousness and conflict. In this episode, we examine the Millennials and Generation Z. Uniquely, generation war today seems to be a conflict over resources more than over values. Is there any basis for this, and what do Millennials actually want? With generational and class conflict seemingly bound together today, we analyse 'Generation Left' and 'Millennial Socialism'. And we ask what the effect of the pandemic may be on the creation of a Gen Z consciousness. Guests include: Paul Taylor, former director, Pew Research Jennie Bristow, senior lecturer in sociology at Canterbury Christ Church University Helen Andrews, senior editor at The American Conservative Clive Martin, journalist who has written for VICE Magazine Josh Glenn, semiotician, author, and publisher of HiLoBrow Jennifer Silva, assistant professor in sociologist, Indiana University Original music by: Jonny Mundey Additional music: Cacti / I Will Be Waiting / courtesy of epidemicsound.com Filthy the Kid / Vampire / courtesy of epidemicsound.com
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Sep 2, 2025 • 1h 9min

RE-RELEASE: OK BUNGER! The Problem of Generations, 4

The fourth in a special five-part series on generational consciousness and conflict. In this episode, we examine Generation X – the generation of the End of History. How was this generation overshadowed by the Boomer's failures? In the Eastern Bloc, the fall of Soviet regimes was a traumatic moment – how did this shape consciousness? And how did the Iranian Revolution – and subsequent war – shape the political perspectives of Iranians? Guests include: Maren Thom, film scholar Alexei Yurchak, professor of anthropology at Berkeley Jennie Bristow, senior lecturer in sociology at Canterbury Christ Church University Josh Glenn, semiotician, author, and publisher of HiLoBrow Arash Azizi, historian of Iran at New York University Felix Krawatzek, political scientist at the Centre for East European and International Studies in Berlin Original music by: Jonny Mundey Additional music: Kit Kruger / Freakin' Freefall / courtesy of epidemicsound.com

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