

Bungacast
Bungacast
The global politics podcast at the end of the End of History. Politics is back but it’s stranger than ever: join us as we chart a course beyond the age of ’bunga bunga’. Interviews, long-form discussions, docu-series.
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 11, 2021 • 7min
Excerpt: /192/ Three Articles: Pandemic (Dis)Satisfactions
On consequences of the pandemic + important local election results in Spain & UK.
We start off by discussing the telling results of some recent local and regional elections: in the UK, Labour continues its drift to becoming a middle-class party; while in Spain, Madrid goes to the right. Podemos flops, while voters seem to endorse an anti-lockdown stance.
Then we get to our three articles on the consequences of the pandemic: is live-streaming complicit with power? Are liberals now anti-science? Will inflation return?
Three Articles:
Stayed home, live streamed, got the T-shirt, Lev Parker, The Conservative Woman
The Liberals Who Can’t Quit Lockdown, Emma Green, The Atlantic
Broad commodities price boom amplifies ‘supercycle’ talk, Neil Hume et al, FT

May 10, 2021 • 5min
Excerpt: /191/ Reading Club: Ever Closer Union?
We discuss the second of Perry Anderson's three LRB essays on the making and unmaking of the EU: "Ever Closer Union?"
Our monthly Reading Club is for patrons $10+. Sign up at patreon.com/bungacast

May 4, 2021 • 1h 12min
/190/ Top 5 Fetishes ft. Elena Louisa Lange
On class reductionism, commodity fetishism, and value theory.
To discuss Covid, the state as 'PMC leviathan', and the politics of value theory, we’re joined by philosopher Elena Louisa Lange, who also explains why class reductionism is not a theoretical position or a mere mistake, but a social reality. We also address the value of 'going back to school', take on the new Leftist 'holy trinity' of class-race-gender, and hear from Elena why we need to theorise the world before we change it.
Readings:
The Middle-Class Leviathan: Corona, the “Fascism” Blackmail, and the Defeat of the Working Class, Elena Louisa Lange and Joshua Pickett-Depaolis, Crisis and Critique, 2020
Marxism and the Crisis of Development in Prewar Japan, Germaine A. Hoston, Princeton, 1987
Lawyer’s Fees, Beetroot, and Music, Elena’s Substack
Value Without Fetish, Elena Louisa Lange, Brill 2021
Marxist Class Theory for a Skeptical World, Raju J. Das, Haymarket, 2018

May 2, 2021 • 1h 18min
UNLOCKED /183/ Acid Bunga Bunga ft. Mike Watson
On memes and the counter-culture.
Theorist and curator Mike Watson advances the argument for "acid leftism". What is this, and why do we need a new counter-culture? Is contemporary leftism lacking a utopian imaginary?
Plus: slow memes and fast memes; the democratisation of art and media; and generations: which ones became conservative, which might not?
Running order:
(00:04:15) - Interview with Mike Watson
(01:02:00) - 'Afterparty' discussion on what a counter-culture might look like today
Readings:
Can the Left Learn to Meme? , Mike Watson, Zero Books
The Acid Left, YouTube channel
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, Walter Benjamin (pdf)

Apr 27, 2021 • 1h 24min
/189/ Pink Tide Paradoxes ft. Fabio Luis
On Latin America's progressive wave and its discontents.
A new book on Latin America argues that 'pink tide' governments tried to treat the symptoms of neoliberal capitalism while allowing the underlying situation to worse. We talk to the author, Fabio Luis, about cases across the region, including the election in Ecuador and Venezuela's disaster, to Bolivia's coup and Argentina's "path of least resistance". How important is regional integration and what does an alternative socialist vision entail? And we ponder a sad question: is the dream of development and modernisation over?
Readings:
Power and Impotence: A History of South America Under Progressivism (1998-2016), Fabio Luis Barbosa dos Santos, Haymarket
/93/ Hot Chile and Other Neoliberal Failures ft. Pablo Pryluka Bungacast

Apr 25, 2021 • 1h 22min
UNLOCKED /179/ The Hobbyist Left ft. David Swift
How to address the political problems of leftwing parties today?
Liverpudlian historian David Swift argues that the problem is hobbyism - people for whom politics constitutes their identity rather than expressing their interest in social and political change. He joins us to take us through his arguments about hobbyism, and how he thinks the Left might change for the better.
Readings:
A Left For Itself, David Swift, Zer0 Books
How the Left lost all purpose, James Bloodworth, Unherd
How not to be a white anti-racist, David Swift, Unherd

Apr 20, 2021 • 7min
Excerpt: /188/ The Huge Package State pt. 2 ft. Anton Jäger
On the end of the End of History and neo-feudalism.
This episode is for subscribers only. Sign up at patreon.com/bungacast
In a continuation of our discussion on the emerging transfer state, we ask whether the end of neoliberalism entails the end of the 'End of History'. What are the determinate features of the End of History that we are leaving behind? Which are still with us?
Also, what to make of arguments that our future is neo- or techno-feudal? Do these terms make any sense? Or is it better to think of two alternate futures: Japanisation or Brazilianisation?
The End of the End of History, Bungacast, Zer0 Books
Neofeudalism: The End of Capitalism?, Jodi Dean, LA Review of Books
Neo-feudalism in California, Joel Kotkin, American Affairs

Apr 20, 2021 • 1h 3min
/187/ The Huge Package State ft. Anton Jäger
On cash welfarism and state investment. Plus regionalism in Belgium & the UK.
Anton Jäger is back on the pod to discuss the emerging 'transfer state'. We examine Biden's massive trillion-dollar spending plans and ask if this means we're leaving neoliberalism. What are the limitations to the 'cashification of welfare'? Also comparisons with cash transfers or lack thereof in the UK, Brazil and Belgium.
Plus Anton talks us through recent Belgian history and why its immobilism and bureaucracy has actually prevented a full-on neoliberal assault.
[Part 2 available at patreon.com/bungacast]
Readings:
“Welfare without the welfare state”: the death of the postwar welfarist consensus, Anton Jäger & Daniel Zamora, New Statesman
Joe Biden Is a Transformational President, David Brooks, NYT

Apr 13, 2021 • 7min
/186/ Aufhebonus Bonus ft. Lee Jones
On Covid state failure + responses to listeners.
The full episode is for subscribers only. Sign up at patreon.com/bungacast
We start off by discussing listener points and criticisms – e.g. is PMC a useful category? Is a counterculture a terrible idea? Were we wrong on Deleuze? More on the lockdown debate... – before featuring the second part of our discussion with Lee Jones on the coronavirus and state failure (from 45:30).
We look in depth at what went wrong in Western state responses to the pandemic, why they didn't follow their own plans, and compare this to South Korea's relative success.
Readings:
How the pandemic has exposed Britain’s failed ‘regulatory state’, Lee Jones, Daily Telegraph
COVID-19 and the failure of the neoliberal regulatory state, Lee Jones and Shahar Hameiri, Review of International Political Economy

Apr 6, 2021 • 56min
/185/ Discipline-Flourishing Democracy ft. Lee Jones
On the uprising in Myanmar, plus Covid state failure.
Southeast Asia scholar (and Bunga recidivist) Lee Jones joins us to talk about the coup in Myanmar (and why the word “coup” can be misleading), and explains the nature of the forces opposing the military, in the context of the country’s recent transition to civilian rule.
Then, from 40mins, we discuss how the UK failed in dealing with the pandemic, and how this applies across the West. Lee's recent work looks at the neoliberal "regulatory state" and its incapacities, so we compare the UK's failure with Korea's relative success.
Readings:
Preliminary thoughts on the Myanmar “coup”, Lee Jones, Medium
Responding to the Myanmar coup, Crisis Group
How the Civil Disobedience Movement can win, Aye Min Thant and Yan Aung, Frontier
How the pandemic has exposed Britain’s failed ‘regulatory state’, Lee Jones, Daily Telegraph
COVID-19 and the failure of the neoliberal regulatory state (pdf), Lee Jones and Shahar Hameiri, Review of International Political Economy