Jacob Siegel
Co-Host of Manifesto!
The knocker-off of tall hats.
Jacob Siegel has hosted 71 Episodes.
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Episode 39: What Jazz Is and Isn't
January 6th, 2022 | 1 hr 32 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by jazz pianist and composer Ethan Iverson to discuss Wynton Marsalis' "What Jazz Is—and Isn't", as well as Marsalis' 1985 album J Mood.
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Episode 38: My Quarrel with Authentic Reactionaries
November 10th, 2021 | 1 hr 44 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Joseph Keegin to discuss Nicolás Gómez Dávila‘s “The Authentic Reactionary,” and Chaim Grade’s classic of Yiddish literature: “My Quarrel with Hersh Rasseyner”
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Episode 37: Humane War
October 7th, 2021 | 1 hr 5 mins
Phil is joined by Samuel Moyn to discuss his new book, Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War, alongside Kathe Kollwitz's The Survivors
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Episode 36: The Simple Art of Murder
September 15th, 2021 | 1 hr 12 mins
Jake and Phil discuss Raymond Chandler's The Simple Art of Murder, alongside Ross MacDonald's novel Black Money.
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Episode 35: Did You Kill Anyone?
July 17th, 2021 | 1 hr 22 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Scott Beauchamp to discuss his new book, Did You Kill Anyone? Reunderstanding My Military Experience as a Critique of Modern Culture, and Alistair Macleod's "The Closing Down of Summer"
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Episode 34: Fratelli Tutti and Fairview
May 19th, 2021 | 1 hr 17 mins
A special live episode of Manifesto! A Podcast courtesy of Fairfield University's Inspired Writers Series. Jake and Phil are joined by Vinson Cunningham, a theater critic and staff writer at the New Yorker, to discuss Pope Francis' Fratelli Tutti and Jackie Sibblies Drury's Fairview.
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Episode 33: The Dream of Meritocracy Produces Monsters
April 13th, 2021 | 1 hr 29 mins
Phil is joined by Eugene McCarraher, Professor of the Humanities and History at Villanova University, to discuss his article "A Providentialism Without God: The Case Against Meritocracy" as well as Goya's "The Dream of Reason Produces Monsters"
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Episode 32: Repressive Tolerance and The Judgement
March 16th, 2021 | 2 hrs 7 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Geoff Shullenberg of Outsider Theory to discuss Herbert Marcuse's "Repressive Tolerance" and Franz Kafka's "The Judgement".
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Episode 31: Everything is Broken
February 12th, 2021 | 1 hr 53 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Alana Newhouse to discuss her essay “Everything Is Broken” and the Ani DiFranco live album “Living in Clip.”
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Episode 30: King Lear or Endgame or Psalm
January 4th, 2021 | 1 hr 14 mins
Jake and Phil discuss Jan Kott's "King Lear or Endgame" and George Oppen's "Psalm."
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Episode 29: What Were We Thinking
December 3rd, 2020 | 2 hrs 2 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Carlos Lozada to discuss his new book, What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era, and the chapter "Decent People" from Garth Greenwell's Cleanness.
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Episode 28: They Will Eat the CIA Men First
September 29th, 2020 | 1 hr 40 mins
This week Jake and Phil are joined by special guest Jesse Walker of Reason Magazine to discuss William S. Burroughs The Revised Boy Scout Manual and Charles Ridley's short anti-Nazi propaganda film, Schichlegruber Doing the Lambeth Walk (assisted by the Gestapo 'Hep-Cats')
The Manifesto: William S. Burroughs, The Revised Boy Scout Manual
https://ohiostatepress.org/books/titles/9780814254899.htmlThe Art: Charles Ridley, 1941, Schichlegruber Doing the Lambeth Walk (assisted by the Gestapo 'Hep-Cats')
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYdmk3GP3iM -
Episode 27: The Owl of Minerva Trots at Dusk
August 13th, 2020 | 2 hrs 1 min
Phil and Jake are joined by Ian Marcus Corbin to discuss Joseph Conrad's Preface and Saul Bellow's "Mosby's Memoirs"
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Episode 26: On Pain and on Fallujah Revisited
July 6th, 2020 | 1 hr 32 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Elliot Ackerman to discuss Ernst Junger’s 1934 essay On Pain, alongside Elliot’s A Battle in Fallujah, Revisited, an excerpt of his memoir, Places and Names.
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Episode 25: The Plague
June 6th, 2020 | 1 hr 40 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Paul Berman to discuss The Plague, by Albert Camus
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Episode 24: Vietnam Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry
April 20th, 2020 | 55 mins 59 secs
Jake and Phil are joined by novelist, essayist, and Penthouse Magazine national security columnist Matt Gallagher to discuss Gustav Hasford’s June 1987 article in Penthouse Magazine, Vietnam Means Never Having to Say Your Sorry. Due to coronavirus-related time constraints (we all have children who need minding), we are departing from our usual format and will just be discussing the manifesto.
The Manifesto:
Gustaf Hasford, Vietnam Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry
http://gustavhasford.blogspot.com/2013/01/vietnam-means-never-having-to-say-youre.htmlThe Art:
Rambo, I guess?