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  • Monthly Review Essays

About Yarden Azoulay Katz

Yarden Katz teaches at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in the Department of American Culture and the Digital Studies Institute. He is the author of Artificial Whiteness: Politics and Ideology in Artificial Intelligence (2020).
  • An aerial view showing destruction in Rafah, Gaza, January 2025.

    The Genocide in Palestine Is Powered by Zionism, Not “AI”

    Yarden Azoulay Katz and Justin Podur

    We keep hearing that Israel’s genocide in Gaza is “AI-powered.” Many pundits warn that this marks a new era in warfare, the first time that “automated” war has been waged. Foreign Policy declares that “AI Decides Who Lives and Dies.” Vox reports that “AI tells Israel who to bomb.” The Washington Post claims “Israel offers […]

  • Passover (Photo: Eczebulun)

    Resisting Eugenics and Racial Capitalism: Passover and the Tradition of Shifra and Puah

    Yarden Azoulay Katz

    This world needs revolutionaries who refuse orders to kill and exploit. Two midwives named Shifra and Puah were such revolutionaries. When a racist ruler asked them to limit the reproduction of slaves—out of fear of a slave uprising—they disobeyed.

Monthly Review Essays

  • Nikolai Gogol’s Department of Government Efficiency
    Andy Merrifield A 1926 Soviet illustration of a production of Gogol's play The Government Inspector, showing audience members in the foreground, and actors on stage in the background.

    Almost two centuries after its opening night, Gogol’s five-act satirical play The Government Inspector continues to create a stir with every performance, seemingly no matter where. Maybe because corruption and self-serving double-talk aren’t just familiar features of 19th-century Russia, but have become ingrained facets of all systems of government and officialdom, making them recognizable to […]

Lost & Found

  • Strike at the Helm: The First Ministerial Meeting of the New Cycle of the Bolivarian Revolution
    Hugo Chávez Mural of Chávez in Caracas. (Univision)

    On October 7th, 2012, after hearing of his victory as the nation‘s candidate with 56 percent of the vote, President Hugo Chávez Frias announced from a balcony in his hometown that a new cycle was beginning the very next day, October 8th.

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