The state is pouring billions into propping up the collapsing financial sector, but who is going to take care of the rest of us? Between Hollywood¿s embattled superbats and the gruesome charisma contests of political party leaders, we can be sure of one thing ¿ we don¿t need another hero! Mute surveys some popular myths of political-economic salvation (and damnation), and looks for signs of collective agency in the global Gotham
Liverpool ¿ Culture of Capital: Leo Singer & Clara Paillard crash Liverpool¿s regeneration party
Descrambling the Food Crisis: George Caffentzis puts the class politics of hunger back on the table
From Subprime to Slump?: Jon Amsden argues that the capitalist doom doctors have got things the wrong way round
Mr Smith Goes to Beijing: Daniel Berchenko on Giovanni Arrighi¿s retrogressive vision of China as the future of capitalism
Mexican Wave: Mihalis Mentinis on a new cycle of armed anti-capitalist struggle in Mexico
Any Other But Our Selves: J.J. Charlesworth on Other-worship in the art gallery and the denigration of human agency
Orientalism Inverted: the Rise of ¿Hindu Nation¿: Neil Gray on Indianness as German ideology, from colonial mystique to neoliberal pogroms
One World, One Lie: Paula Cerni finds a thoroughly modern lack of democracy in Tibet
Quarterly, critical and cheap, Mute is a concrete jumble of all that¿s still grunting in the inter-finessing hyper-barrios of culture, politics and technology 2.0. As capitalism yawns towards apocalypse we match it issue by issue with a sustained critique of everything existing, from eco prole-bashing and shanty chic to academic aut-onanist marxistry