Phil Klay
Co-Host of Manifesto!
Author of the short story collection Redeployment.
Phil Klay has hosted 65 Episodes.
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Episode 65: Orwell and Ukraine
March 30th, 2024 | 1 hr 11 mins
Phil and Jake are joined by the Matt Gallagher, author of Daybreak, to discuss George Orwell's "Looking Back on the Spanish War, and Benjamin Busch's photographs from Ukraine, "Nine Dialogues: Conflict in Context"
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Episode 64: Power of the Powerless and the Velvet Underground
February 27th, 2024 | 1 hr 22 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by the novelist and essayist Jared Marcel Pollen to discuss Vaclav Havel’s “The Power of the Powerless” and The Velvet Underground’s second album, White Light/White Heat
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Episode 63: How Money Culture Hurts the American Family and Girls
January 26th, 2024 | 1 hr 12 mins
Jake and Phil discuss "How Money Culture Hurts the American Family," by Ian Marcus Corbin, and episode seven of the first season of Girls
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Episode 62: Last Men and Women: George Scialabba and the Challenge of Modernity
December 7th, 2023 | 1 hr 20 mins
Jake and Phil are joined live at Fairfield University by the great critic and essayist George Scialabba to discuss Last Men and Women
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Episode 61: Red Music and Mal Waldron
November 27th, 2023 | 1 hr 8 mins
Jake and Phil discuss Josef Skvorecky's "Red Music," an account of playing jazz under Nazism and Communism, alongside Mal Waldron's "Mal Waldron Plays Erik Satie"
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Episode 60: The Palestinian People and the Western Observer
October 30th, 2023 | 1 hr 1 min
Phil talks with poet and translator Philip Metres about the current conflict, his poem "Remorse for Temperate Speech," as well as his book "Returning to Jaffa."
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Episode 59: Israel and Hamas
October 28th, 2023 | 1 hr 53 mins
Phil asks Jake about the recent conflict in Israel, and they take listener questions.
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Episode 58: The Enlightenment of Katzuo Nakamatsu
September 27th, 2023 | 31 mins 24 secs
Phil is joined by Sam Kimbriel, director of the Aspen Institute's Philosophy and Society Initiative, and Jennifer Shyue, a Spanish language literary translator, to discuss her recently published translation of Augusto Higa Oshiro's The Enlightenment of Katzuo Nakamatsu.
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Episode 57: Some Lying and Some BS
September 10th, 2023 | 1 hr 34 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Walter Kirn to discuss Kirn's essay "The Bullshit" alongside Mark Twain's "My First Lie and How I Got Out of It"
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Episode 56: The Secular Saint
August 9th, 2023 | 1 hr 35 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Santiago Ramos, a contributing writer to Commonweal Magazine, to discuss Michael Novak's The Secular Saint and the epilogue to Michel Houellebecq's 1998 novel The Elementary Particles.
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Episode 55: The Great Mating Debate
July 12th, 2023 | 1 hr 18 mins
Phil is joined by Becca Rothfeld, BD McClay, and Jon Baskin to discuss Norman Rush's 1991 novel Mating, and whether it offers a roadmap for love in the 21st century.
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Episode 54: Nirvana and The Trials of the Young
June 13th, 2023 | 1 hr 20 mins
Phil is joined by the great novelist, short story writer and essayist Mary Gaitskill to discuss Gaitskill's essay "The Trials of the Young" in the most recent Liberties Journal, alongside the Nirvana songs "Drain You" and "Moist Vagina."
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Episode 53: Poe's Law and Philip K. Dick's Faith of Our Fathers
May 16th, 2023 | 1 hr 36 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by Gurwinder Bhogal to discuss Poe's Law and Philip K. Dick's Faith of Our Fathers
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Episode 52: True Believers and the Case of the Writer Turned Congressman
April 13th, 2023 | 1 hr 51 mins
Jake and Phil are joined by former Michigan Congressman Peter Meijer to discuss longshoreman philosopher Eric Hoffer’s 1951 book, The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements, and the poem “On Reading Crowds and Power,” by Geoffrey Hill.
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Episode 51: A Public Address, A Colloquium, or Maybe Just a Q&A
March 21st, 2023 | 1 hr 9 mins
Jake and Phil answer questions from our listeners.
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Episode 50: El Greco, Picasso, and The Pleasures of Ignorance
February 22nd, 2023 | 1 hr 8 mins
Jake and Phil discuss Aldous Huxley's "Meditation on El Greco", and Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.