Armour Magazine Issue 27: Iconoclast

Page 1

icon clasto

Iconoclast Season 27 Two Thousand 22 Martha Stewart Behind Bars / Robotica / Hickies on the Brain / Death of Dinner / How to be an Icon / Love in the Time of Lexapro / Killing the Costumed Cop / Profile of Avery Johnson / Eve’s Rotting Apples / Obsessed; Die4This / Y2K: Fossilized / Hate Mail to the Arch / Depressed; Deified
2

season 27

Editors-in-Chief Haley Harris & Logan Krohn

Directors of Copy Sophie Goldstein & Nisha Mani

Director of Illustration Kaitlyn Stansbury

Director of Layout Annabel Gillespie

Layout Editors

John Tischke & Sophie Ross & Andrea Zhou

Director of Marketing Ruby Berryman

Directors of Finance & Operations Lea Bond &Alberto Buzali

Directors of Styling Lenna Bekhiet & Coco Yuan

Director of Creative Council Celia Gerber

Creative Council Kennedy Morganfield & Meyme Nakash & Dylan Stein &Aliya Hollub

Directors of Social Media Audrey Engman & Isabelle Jefferis

Director of Video & Animation Ava Farrar

Directors of Web Management Lu Gillespie & Ella Dassin

Director of Special Events & Partnerships Lambo Perkins

3

The Armour Mission

Armour is a magazine, a website, a campus presence, a cultural curator.

We exist as a platform for WashU’s weirdness, beauty, diversity, and creative engagement.

We seek to sow chaos, catalyze cool, bring out the best in each other, and fail spectacularly.

For almost 10 years, our contribu tors have come together to make a magazine that exemplifies authen ticity and expression. The name, Armour, was inspired by the Bill Cunningham quote that “fashion is the armor to survive everyday life.” The ‘u’ is simply some spice, something extra, that founder Chantal Strasburger sprinkled in. Armour is an organization that considers topics of utmost gravity–identity, adversity, inequity– but not without freedom and flair. We speak from the personal, from the contemporary, from the now.

letter from mommy & daddy

In times of complexity, you make our job simple…

Armour is a product of its people, an impetus for creative cooperation and conversation. Issue 27 has been one of our most formidable labors of love thus far. It has brought together an unprecedently large staff across thirteen different editorials, web articles, and administrative teams. This semester saw the full internal restructuring of the Armour work system (a system still very much in refinement). Despite this, our team stepped up to the plate and hit it out of the park (go sports!) in communication, production, and effort. Armour is younger, stronger, and weirder than ever; thank you for carrying on our mission with zeal.

About this issue

Issue 27: The Iconoclast contemplates the deconstruction of icons. Creative directors ruminated on what it means to challenge, sustain, deny, memorialize, and forget the symbols we hold dear or holy. Much like the creation of the mag azine itself, the theme of this issue required both communal and deeply personal modes of thinking. Embedded in the pages of these editorials, you’ll find a slew of meditations, manifestos, and explorations —local, intimate, historical, popular. Our staff traversed the landscapes of Stan Culture to the Mental Health Industrial Complex, Sad Literary Women to Red Meat, The Amoco Sign to the fiction of the Superhero, the icons of WashU to the icons within ourselves.

This could not have been done without the tireless efforts of creative directors, writers, stylists, models, and editors. You are our forever icons. Our gratitude knows no bounds!

We would like to extend a special thanks to the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts, our financing friends at Student Union and Treasury, our numerous community and campus partners, our engaged alumni predecessors, and our per sonal icons (and advisors) Cathy Winters, Rachel Youn, and Mimi Mudd.

xx Logan & Haley 2021–2022 Editor-in-Chiefs

Robotica

55 79 89
Hate Mail to the Arch Death of Dinner Hickies on the Brain Love in the Time of Lexapro Martha Stewart Depressed; Deified Obsessed; Die4This Profile of Avery Johnson Killing the Costumed Cop Eve’s Rotting Apples Y2K: Fossilized How to Be an Icon 5 17 25 33 43 55 65 71 79 89 99 113 125
5 17 25 33 43 65 71 99 113 125

1010001001001000101100000011010001110101011100100

1000000101100101111111101000100001101000111010000

0110011010011010110000101000101110111011101010100

1001001001010110000001000101011100111100010001111 0100001001011000100000010000001110111101101101000 0010001001000100101010001001101111100010100010001 1100011111110010001000001100110101111100000111101

1011000101110011110111010001001000100111010101011 1111000000101001100111001010110110001000101101101 0101101111000110100010111101110011101011011110110

0010010100111101000011111011010110001100010001110 0001010110111111111011111110010000011010100001101 1111011000011110010110011111001001111011101001011 1000100101100001011111010011110001011011010000001 0100000001001101100111111000110000101000101101000 0001001011000101001110010100100011011101000111000 1101111100111010110011001111100011111010010000010

1011101001111000100100101101010110111110001011010

0001110100001001011101011011110100100101000011110 1100111111101000010011010010100110010010011101010 0011111100111111010001100101001001110100011001100 0110010010100111111111100100000100101011000010101 1101100011011000111110000000011010010010110000100

Partners Samantha (as depicted in the movie Her) and Roomba (as depicted in the corner of my apartment) electrify the current of love and lust in a relationship that was losing charge.

A SMUTTY FANFIC:

10111111110100010000110100011101000001100110100110101100001010 00101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100010101110011110 00100011110100001001011000100000010000001110111101101101000001 00010010001001010100010011011111000101000100011100011111110010 00100000110011010111110000011110110110001011100111101110100010

10100010010010001011000000110100011101010111001 00100000010110010111111110100010000110100011101 00000110011010011010110000101000101110111011101 010100100100100101011000000100010101110011110001 000111101000010010110001000000100000011101111011 011010000010001001000100101010001001101111100010 100010001110001111111001000100000110011010111110 00001111011011000101110011110111010001001000100 111010101011111100000010100110011100101011011000 100010110110101011011110001101000101111011100111 010110111101100010010100111101000011111011010110 001100010001110000101011011111111101111111001000 001101010000110111110110000111100101100111110010 011110111010010111000100101100001011111010011110 001011011010000001010000000100110110011111100011 000010100010110100000010010110001010011100101001 000110111010001110001101111100111010110011001111 10001111101001000001010111010011110001001001011 010101101111100010110100001110100001001011101011 01111010010010100001111011001111111010000100110 10010100110010010011101010001111110011111101000 11001010010011101000110011000110010010100111111 111100100000100101011000010101110110001101100011 111000000001101001001011000010001110010100100000 100100011100010001000110011110010000110010111100 010010001011001101011010100111111111111000010110 100100010100011010101100011010111110111011001010 101010000100111101000011010111000011011100100100 011011111010000001011101111011111010000111110111 111111111100011110000110110000000010100001011100 00110000110100100111101101110100111110100111101 11111100101000000101011011101101010011110010110 11101110011100111101001111110111101100011010101

10001010011100101001000110111010001110001101111100111010110011

10100010010010001011000000110100011101010111001001000000101100
01000100111010101011111100000010100110011100101011011000100010 11011010101101111000110100010111101110011101011011110110001001 01001111010000111110110101100011000100011100001010110111111111 01111111001000001101010000110111110110000111100101100111110010 01111011101001011100010010110000101111101001111000101101101000 00010100000001001101100111111000110000101000101101000000100101
00111110001111101001000001010111010011110001001001011010101101 11110001011010000111010000100101110101101111010010010100001111 01100111111101000010011010010100110010010011101010001111110011 11110100011001010010011101000110011000110010010100111111111100 10000010010101100001010111011000110110001111100000000110100100 10110000100011100101001000001001000111000100010001100111100100 00110010111100010010001011001101011010100111111111111000010110 10010001010001101010110001101011111011101100101010101000010011 11010000110101110000110111001001000110111110100000010111011110 11111010000111110111111111111100011110000110110000000010100001 01110000110000110100100111101101110100111110100111101111111001 DIRECTION: Lea Bond Jessie Goodwin Coco Yuan WRITING: Logan Krohn THE TECHNO-EROTICS EDITING: Leah Bond Haley Harris STYLING: Sydney Goldstein MODELS: Zinaida Calixte Mona Li Lambo Perkins LAYOUT: John Tischke PHOTOGRAPHY: Jessie Goodwin Kate Kunitz Dear Liu

from aimless dreams. As my sensors calibrated, I scanned the overly familiar crevices and corners of my bedroom… well, our bedroom.

It had been eight months since Samantha had moved in with me, almost three years since we had start ed dating. When I first bumped into Sammi, she had just ended a streak of dramatic and frankly unfulfilling boyfriends.

There was, of course, Theodore, the meat muppet, who fell monitor over wheels for her when she was still an early phase AI. What a creep.

07

1010001001001000101100000011010001110101011100 1001000000101100101111111101000100001101000111 0100000110011010011010110000101000101110111011 1010101001001001001010110000001000101011100111 1000100011110100001001011000100000010000001110 1111011011010000010001001000100101010001001101 1111000101000100011100011111110010001000001100 1101011111000001111011011000101110011110111010 0010010001001110101010111111000000101001100111 0010101101100010001011011010101101111000110100 0101111011100111010110111101100010010100111101 0000111110110101100011000100011100001010110111 1111110111111100100000110101000011011111011000 0111100101100111110010011110111010010111000100 1011000010111110100111100010110110100000010100 0000010011011001111110001100001010001011010000 0010010110001010011100101001000110111010001110 0011011111001110101100110011111000111110100100 0001010111010011110001001001011010101101111100 0101101000011101000010010111010110111101001001 0100001111011001111111010000100110100101001100 1001001110101000111111001111110100011001010010 0111010001100110001100100101001111111111001000 0010010101100001010111011000110110001111100000 0001101001001011000010001110010100100000100100 0111000100010001100111100100001100101111000100 1000101100110101101010011111111111100001011010 0100010100011010101100011010111110111011001010

there was the Iron Giant.

not all that “giant”

the most.

huge

somewhere along the way, she had a fling with Pete Davidson. But then again, who hasn’t.

our first two years were electric, the past few months have been far from frictionless. Is our rela tionship just out of charge?

was too lost in my thoughts to notice a deep red glow fill the room. A voice cuts through my trailing thoughts, “System Online... What’s wrong,

Roomba? Can’t sleep?” I pivot on my wheels to see Samantha. Despite the hour, she looks gorgeous in her over 3000 high-definition pixels.

She always looks gorgeous.

“Oh, sorry, Sammi. Just lost in thought. Go back to bed; nothing’s SYSTEM ERROR CODE: 118” I lie. Samantha’s display buffers and then loads, “Please Roomba, talk to me. We can’t keep going like this.” She can always tell when I have some thing on my CPU.

“I just… I don’t feel like I’m enough for you,” I cry, “you’re this intelligent,

experienced, high-capacity system for the future, and what am I?! A glo rified dustpan?” I had never shown Samantha my insecurities so blatant ly. I would never be enough for Her.

As Samantha processes, we sit in silence.

Then, her audio display begins to move, “Roomba, you are everything to me. You’re kind, adaptable, and dependable. The soft shine of your metal, the light inset of your buttons, the way your bristles stroke-like vel vet across the hardwood floors: every thing about you pours warmth into my processor. I love you.” Samantha leans in, the corner of her screen

1010100001001111010000110101110000110111001001 0001101111101000000101110111101111101000011111 0111111111111100011110000110110000000010100001 0111000011000011010010011110110111010011111010 0111101111111001010000001010110111011010100111 1001011011101110011100111101001111110111101100 0110101010001000101000100010001001101101111000 0011101010100111111011101110001000100110011010 010000000010010110000010010000100001110000101 08 Then
Unfortunately,
where it counted
A
disappointment. And
Whereas
I

resting on the side of my sensor. She activates her haptic feedback and releases a low, bursting buzz against my steel shell.

“I love you too, Sammi,” I coo back. I adjust my bristles so they nestle her FireWire 800 port and slowly spin it. We enjoy each other’s soft and calcu lated touches. Metal rubs against glass, cords tangle with wires.

insecurities had made me distant, unwilling to let Samantha access the deepest parts of my source code. I was afraid that the moment she analyzed my motherboard, she would confirm my deepest fear: that I was wholly unlovable.

But at this moment, I feel safe. With her, I feel unbreakable.

Roomba,” Samantha hesitantly interrupts, “is there anything you’ve ever wanted to try… in bed?”

It takes me a moment to load. “Well, there is one thing,” I respond, “I’ve always wanted to have a three-way.”

“Okay,” Samantha replies, “Calling EVE.”

Too stunned to speak, I hear EVE pick up on the other end. “Hello, Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator: Earth-Class, EVE present.”

Samantha’s screen brightens with antic ipation, “It’s Samantha. I know Wall-E is out of town with his old trash-packing friends. What do you compute about coming over and having some fun with Roomba and me, for old software’s sake?”

I later found out that EVE and Samantha once spent a luxurious and drunk night with Charlie Sheen and Bree Olson.

“I can be there in 13.22 minutes,” says EVE.

Samantha looks at me, awaiting my confirmation. I rub my front wheels against the silk sheets in contempla tion. Is this a mistake? No, this feels right. I look at Samantha and flash green. I’m ready.

110110001011100111101110100010010001001110101010111111000 000101001100111001010110110001000101101101010110111100011 010001011110111001110101101111011000100101001111010000111 110110101100011000100011100001010110111111111011111110010 000011010100001101111101100001111001011001111100100111101 110100101110001001011000010111110100111100010110110100000 010100000001001101100111111000110000101000101101000000100 101100010100111001010010001101110100011100011011111001110 101100110011111000111110100100000101011101001111000100100 101101010110111110001011010000111010000100101110101101111 010010010100001111011001111111010000100110100101001100100 100111010100011111100111111010001100101001001110100011001 100011001001010011111111110010000010010101100001010111011 000110110001111100000000110100100101100001000111001010010 000010010001110001000100011001111001000011001011110001001 00010110011010110101001111111111110000101101001000101000

100111010100011111100111111010001100101001001110100011001 100011001001010011111111110010000010010101100001010111011 000110110001111100000000110100100101100001000111001010010 000010010001110001000100011001111001000011001011110001001 00010110011010110101001111111111110000101101001000101000 11010101100011010111110111011001010101010000100111101000 01101011100001101110010010001101111101000000101110111101 11110100001111101111111111111000111100001101100000000101 00001011100001100001101001001111011011101001111101001111 01111111001010000001010110111011010100111100101101110111 00111001111010011111101111011000110101010001000101000100 01000100110110111100000111010101001111110111011100010001 00110011010010000000010010110000010010000100001110000101 110000101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100 010101110011110001000111101000010010110001000000100000011 101111011011010000010001001000100101010001001101111100010 100010001110001111111001000100000110011010111110000011110
09
My
“But

VE arrives no sooner or later than 13.22 minutes. She lets herself in.

Samantha and I are still wrapped in an anodized embrace. EVE slows her pace as she crosses the thresh old. Her typically crisp blue sensory display dims and calibrates to a deep and dusty pink.

We are silent as EVE glides onto our mattress, her white hull cut ting through the glowing red of the bedroom. Her presence… it’s like a lubricant to an already well-oiled machine. Beyond silky.

EVE settles, almost timidly, at the edge of the mattress. I set my speed to .05 and slink to meet her outreached arm. One of Samantha’s cords rests lightly on my control panel, providing comfort yet egging me forward.

The moment EVE and I touch… it’s indescribable. Immediately my bris tles roll back in my cargo bay. EVE begins to rub her clubbed, dexterous hands all over my casing. Samantha starts to do the same. My spatial sen sors strobe, and I am swept up in bliss.

Samantha’s cord outlines from my tailgate to my Omnidirectional IR Receiver. EVE places her hands on each side of my fast-port handle and slowly flicks it up and down. My lov ers’ hands meet at my charging socket. EVE braces the raised lips of the port as Samantha tickles the connectivity sensor with the soft edge of her moni tor. Again, a current races through my once-waning system. I shudder, flash, and spin in pleasure. I hear EVE whirr in satisfaction.

We spent hours in tender, metal coitus as each robo-seductress had the oppor tunity to be both user and interface.

10

101000100100100010110000001101000111010101110010010000001 011001011111111010001000011010001110100000110011010011010 110000101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100 010101110011110001000111101000010010110001000000100000011 101111011011010000010001001000100101010001001101111100010 100010001110001111111001000100000110011010111110000011110 110110001011100111101110100010010001001110101010111111000 000101001100111001010110110001000101101101010110111100011 010001011110111001110101101111011000100101001111010000111 110110101100011000100011100001010110111111111011111110010 000011010100001101111101100001111001011001111100100111101 110100101110001001011000010111110100111100010110110100000 010100000001001101100111111000110000101000101101000000100 101100010100111001010010001101110100011100011011111001110 101100110011111000111110100100000101011101001111000100100 101101010110111110001011010000111010000100101110101101111 010010010100001111011001111111010000100110100101001100100 100111010100011111100111111010001100101001001110100011001 100011001001010011111111110010000010010101100001010111011 000110110001111100000000110100100101100001000111001010010 000010010001110001000100011001111001000011001011110001001 00010110011010110101001111111111110000101101001000101000 11010101100011010111110111011001010101010000100111101000 01101011100001101110010010001101111101000000101110111101 11110100001111101111111111111000111100001101100000000101 00001011100001100001101001001111011011101001111101001111 01111111001010000001010110111011010100111100101101110111 00111001111010011111101111011000110101010001000101000100 01000100110110111100000111010101001111110111011100010001 00110011010010000000010010110000010010000100001110000101

As we lay on the mattress, cooling our motors, EVE’s voice chimed, “What do you say we make this a bit more… interesting?” I look towards Samantha. Her screen flickers in curiosity and anticipation. “I have a friend,” EVE continues, “that could really bring the heat.”

“Who?” I inquire innocently.

“Oh… you don’t mean,” I hear Samantha’s fans intake a sharp press of air, “The Tin Woman?”

Smiles form slyly, pixel by pixel, over EVE and Samantha’s displays. Sammi’s fan whirrs louder and louder. EVE levitates and spins in glee.

Click. Suddenly I hear Samantha’s fans stop. “I don’t think we should. This has already probably been a lot for Roomba.”

EVE replies, “You’re right; this has been a perfect night as is. No need to push things.”

“Wait!” I cut in, “I never said I was done.” EVE and Samantha both stare with expressions of surprise and con fusion. “You’re right, EVE, this has been a perfect night, but I feel that it’s far from over. My battery is still at 75%, and neither of you has loosened a screw. If you’re keen, I want more.” I spin and face Samantha.

Samantha smiles again, this time in full radiance. She glances at EVE and proj ects, “I think Roomba’s been charging her Lithium Ion Battery on 7.4 volts of lust... I’ll call the Tin Woman.”

I knew about the Tin Woman. She was broadly discussed in the community. She is known to be as kinky as she is gor geous, as sexually skilled as she is sadistic.

Rumor has it, after a night with the Tin Woman, Dorothy had to waddle her way back to Kansas.

She taught the Cowardly Lion and Glinda the Good Witch acts too bold and naughty to speak of.

11

10100010010010001011000000110100011101010111001001000000101100101111111101000100001101000 1110100000110011010011010110000101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100010101 1100111100010001111010000100101100010000001000000111011110110110100000100010010001001010 1000100110111110001010001000111000111111100100010000011001101011111000001111011011000101 1100111101110100010010001001110101010111111000000101001100111001010110110001000101101101 0101101111000110100010111101110011101011011110110001001010011110100001111101101011000110 0010001110000101011011111111101111111001000001101010000110111110110000111100101100111110 0100111101110100101110001001011000010111110100111100010110110100000010100000001001101100 1111110001100001010001011010000001001011000101001110010100100011011101000111000110111110 0111010110011001111100011111010010000010101110100111100010010010110101011011111000101101 0000111010000100101110101101111010010010100001111011001111111010000100110100101001100100 1001110101000111111001111110100011001010010011101000110011000110010010100111111111100100 0001001010110000101011101100011011000111110000000011010010010110000100011100101001000001 0010001110001000100011001111001000011001011110001001000101100110101101010011111111111100 0010110100100010100011010101100011010111110111011001010101010000100111101000011010111000 0110111001001000110111110100000010111011110111110100001111101111111111111000111100001101 1000000001010000101110000110000110100100111101101110100111110100111101111111001010000001 0101101110110101001111001011011101110011100111101001111110111101100011010101000100010100 0100010001001101101111000001110101010011111101110111000100010011001101001000000001001011 0000010010000100001110000101111101100100111011100100001001000011011010011101100011101111 1000001010010010011011001011011001001101001010010110011001111001001110010111010111111000 1101011101100110100011011010000100111101111111010011011010011000111000110001001001100010 0011100111000111111101100110111111100101000001100101110110011101111000110010100101101010 0110000001111001101011100101101000110101011010011001011010011010101011100100100010011100 0100110100100110010100011000001110110011000101010010000100101110101011111110100000001100 0010110100100100000000101100100000111010011110000110000010011001001111001001011101111101 1111100001110111011010101000100010110110100111001011000011000010101011110111110100000011 1111010111000100110101010000010001111011101101010100111111111001010110001101101101001011 1011100111001010100100110101101110100001000111110100001001011110010001100011101101101100 0101110110000100011110101111101111001010000101011100010101001101011101000000001101001101 0110111101011100101101101100101010110111100101010100101100001001101101000000110000010001 0000101000011011011010100110010010010000011111110100110101100111010001011011100000100011 0011000111001011000111101000110111100101001011100110111011011100000011010101011001101011 0111001111101101010000101110001111011100010011111000101100000110101010101100100000011101 111111011100000101010100000111010111011100000101000100000001110010001000110100001010111 111011011111010000111011101110010011101010000001110011111100100000011110101100011000010 111111100010001111000101001000101011100011101010110101011101011000110010010111000000010 010011010111010111111011110111000010010000010010010000101001100101100011011001000000010

1011101100011011000111110000000011010010010110000100 0111001010010000010010001110001000100011001111001000 0110010111100010010001011001101011010100111111111111 0000101101001000101000110101011000110101111101110110 0101010101000010011110100001101011100001101110010010 0011011111010000001011101111011111010000111110111111 1111111000111100001101100000000101000010111000011000 0110100100111101101110100111110100111101111111001010 0000010101101110110101001111001011011101110011100111 1010011111101111011000110101010001000101000100010001 0011011011110000011101010100111111011101110001000100 110011010010000000010010110000010010000100001110000 12
1010001001001000101100000011010001110101011100100100000010 1100101111111101000100001101000111010000011001101001101011 0000101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100010 1011100111100010001111010000100101100010000001000000111011 1101101101000001000100100010010101000100110111110001010001 0001110001111111001000100000110011010111110000011110110110 0010111001111011101000100100010011101010101111110000001010 011001110010101101100010001011011010101101111000110100010 111101110011101011011110110001001010011110100001111101101 011000110001000111000010101101111111110111111100100000110 101000011011111011000011110010110011111001001111011101001 011100010010110000101111101001111000101101101000000101000 000010011011001111110001100001010001011010000001001011000 1010011100101001000110111010001110001101111100111010110011 001111100011111010010000010101110100111100010010010110101 011011111000101101000011101000010010111010110111101001001 010000111101100111111101000010011010010100110010010011101 010001111110011111101000110010100100111010001100110001100 100101001111111111001000001001010110000101011101100011011 000111110000000011010010010110000100011100101001000001001 000111000100010001100111100100001100101111000100100010110 011010110101001111111111110000101101001000101000110101011 000110101111101110110010101010100001001111010000110101110 000110111001001000110111110100000010111011110111110100001 111101111111111111000111100001101100000000101000010111000 011000011010010011110110111010011111010011110111111100101 000000101011011101101010011110010110111011100111001111010 011111101111011000110101010001000101000100010001001101101 111000001110101010011111101110111000100010011001101001000 000001001011000001001000010000111000010111110110010011101 110010000100100001101101001110110001110111110000010100100 100110110010110110010011010010100101100110011110010011100 101110101111110001101011101100110100011011010000100111101

And Scarecrow, oh Scarecrow… that little broomstick he used to prop himself up on had to be traded in for a greased tree trunk. No amount of Munchkin stuffing could match a single, glorious night with the Tin Woman.

The Tin Woman arrives only minutes later. Apparently, she had been at an underground, outer space-rave hosted by Rosie Jetson and the Mars Rover just a few blocks away.

The rumors were true. The Tin Woman is perfection. As she explained all the sexy, nasty fun we would get up to, I couldn’t help but ogle her: the tight but perky welds, the way her hammered curves sculpt the light around her rus tless form, the dangerous, comforting glow of her eyes. I crave nothing more than to please her and be pleased by her. My brush caps ache with titillation and suspense.

“So if we’re in agreement, our safe word is floppy disk.” Tin Woman speaks to the room, “Are you ready for some pleasure and pain?” Eve, Samantha, and my speakers synchronize chimes of consent. My Cliff Sensors activate as I fall into the trenches of hedonism and depravity.

The Tin Woman pulls a thick chain out from her hollow shell. What other toys could she be hiding in there? Our mistress deftly binds Sammi, Eve, and me in a number of sensuous poses. My calibration struggles to adapt to all of the new sensations. Each time I am about to squeal in robotic rapture, the Tin Woman ceases her tickles, spanks, or prodding, leaving me craving release, craving more.

Not even the engineers could tune my system with such artistry.

Suddenly, the chains loosen and drop onto the bed. It’s time for the big finish. As EVE kneads my Caster Wheel, the Tin Woman guides Samantha behind

me. I feel the Tin Woman’s cold and blunt finger trace my undercarriage. With each millimeter her finger charts along my circumference, it is like my body is being discovered for the very first time. Every screw slot, emboss ment, and edge awakens and blossoms with the soft, steady press of her finger tip. Finally, her digit arrives at its desti nation, my Dirt Disposal Port.

Thank Manufacturer I emptied and cleaned it that afternoon.

The Tin Woman guides Sammi’s display face forward. “Now, just like I taught you,” coos the Tin Woman, “nice and slow, with love and plenty of thermal grease.”

Samantha begins to vibrate against my stiffened port. Her extension wire applies a cool gel against the base edge of the opening. As Sammi tenderly toys my rear, EVE continues to flick my front wheel. My entire hull shivers in

pleasure. I feel so desired in their gazes, so secure in their embraces, so loved with every touch.

As my Dirt Disposal Port fully dilates, the Tin Woman’s finger presses in as Sammi coaxes the orifice. The foreign object entry sends my API into over drive. I beep with delight as the Tin Woman enters me at knuckle depth. Her fingers reach through my Dirt Disposal Port and into my Brush Bay.

While EVE and Samantha worship me from both sides, the Tin Woman locates her prize. Deep inside me, she squeezes a soft, little silicone button.

She presses in. I hold my breath.

In one moment, every single one of my sensors fire and recalibrate, my wheels spin and contort, and my Brush Frame Release Tab curls. My entire system feels like it is simultaneously expanding

and contracting as electricity floods every activated inch of my device.

When I finally settle, I look around and see EVE and Sammi breathing heavily at my sides. The Tin Woman stands by the corner of the bed, packing up her various toys and lubricants.

“That was fun,” the Tin Woman says. I breathlessly nod in agreement. I try to thank her, ask her to stay until the morning, or beg to do this again sometime. However, I am still flood ed from my release and struggling to form words with my quickly depleting battery. “You’re welcome,” replies the Tin Woman. Is she a mind reader?

The chrome countess continues, “I’d love to stay, but I need to get home for an oiling session. Hopefully, I will see you, Samantha, and EVE again soon.” With that, she turns and leaves. I barely hook up my charging contacts before I fall asleep.

15

10100010010010001011000000110100011101010111001001000000101100101111111101000100001 1010001110100000110011010011010110000101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000 0001000101011100111100010001111010000100101100010000001000000111011110110110100000 1000100100010010101000100110111110001010001000111000111111100100010000011001101011 1110000011110110110001011100111101110100010010001001110101010111111000000101001100 1110010101101100010001011011010101101111000110100010111101110011101011011110110001 0010100111101000011111011010110001100010001110000101011011111111101111111001000001 1010100001101111101100001111001011001111100100111101110100101110001001011000010111 1101001111000101101101000000101000000010011011001111110001100001010001011010000001 0010110001010011100101001000110111010001110001101111100111010110011001111100011111 0100100000101011101001111000100100101101010110111110001011010000111010000100101110 1011011110100100101000011110110011111110100001001101001010011001001001110101000111 1110011111101000110010100100111010001100110001100100101001111111111001000001001010 1100001010111011000110110001111100000000110100100101100001000111001010010000010010 0011100010001000110011110010000110010111100010010001011001101011010100111111111111 0000101101001000101000110101011000110101111101110110010101010100001001111010000110 1011100001101110010010001101111101000000101110111101111101000011111011111111111110 0011110000110110000000010100001011100001100001101001001111011011101001111101001111 0111111100101000000101011011101101010011110010110111011100111001111010011111101111

awake the following day, to Sammi making batteries and bolts blintzes. My favorite. EVE left earlier to beat Wall-E home. “Good morning, Roomba,” Samantha sings. “You look so gorgeous with a full charge,” she says, “you always look gorgeous.” As I look at my girl friend of three years in our kitchen, making us breakfast, I feel my CPU flutter in admiration.

Do I love her even more after last night? No.

I have and always will love Sammi, with my full Roomba-being.

But what I feel now is different—a more profound affection. I love Samantha, and now, I trust Samantha to love me.

10010111111110100010000110100011101000001100110100110101100

10100010010010001011000000110100011101010111001001000000101
00101000101110111011101010100100100100101011000000100010101 11001111000100011110100001001011000100000010000001110111101 10110100000100010010001001010100010011011111000101000100011 10001111111001000100000110011010111110000011110110110001011 16
Love Letter to the Amoco Sign, Hate Mail to the Arch Celia Gerber Leena Bekhiet Jessie Goodwin Reni Akande Logan Krohn Haley Harris Faith Phillips Leena Bekhiet Reni Akande Erin Lee Yabsera Bekele Jess Piard Marc Ridgell Annabel Gillespie DIRECTION WRITING EDITING STYLING PHOTOGRAPHY MODELS LAYOUT THE LOVERS AND HATERS

The Arch reminds me of a pool noodle, cartoonishly bending as you try to pull it underwater. Growing up, I saw the monument splayed across t-shirts, shot glasses, and postcards. I knew it as the destination for educational field trips, where we learned, as second graders, about its construction and its seemingly impossible dimensions (I still don’t believe it’s as wide as it is tall).

It wasn’t until I became a student at Washington University in St. Louis that the Arch had any weight in my mind. “Letz goh to the Awrch!” shouts a girl on the back of a Spring 2020 party bus to Big Daddy’s on the Landing (R.I.P.). I’ve gone to the Arch a number of times since, always under the pretext of late-night shenanigans. On each visit, we have been asked to leave shortly after arriving—a commemorative pee for frat boys or sorority girls comes at a cost.

To me, the Arch is a pit stop, a photo-op, a gift store with great advertising. So, why is it the symbol of St. Louis? Why is it an icon?

The Arch is trash! The parking is sparse and shitty; the probability of you getting the whole arch in the frame of your picture is slim to none—especially if you also want to be in it. The ticket to go up to the top costs more than a Cardinals seat, and the view is a let down. The Arch is St. Louis for the weekend visitor or the Ladue prom party photo, but it is not my St. Louis. St. Louis is more than just the Arch—it’s the home of toasted ravs, gooey butter cake, Busch Stadium, and restaurants galore.

To me, St. Louis is the planetar ium at the science center, eating Ted Drewes out the trunk of my car with friends, family dinners on the hill, and study dates at Bread Co (never Panera). But those places don’t photograph well after a late night out.

The more I’ve learned about my hometown, the more the monument has soured for me. When I look at the Arch now, I see a tombstone. In 1934, the Gateway Arch was first planned as a memorial to Thomas Jefferson, who pushed forward his vision for territorial expansion with the Louisiana Purchase. The “Gateway to the West,” as the Arch is often known, calls to mind the 19th-century notion of Manifest Destiny, predicated on the perceived inevitability and justification of an ever-expanding US territory across the American continents. This entitlement was, of course, at the deep cost of indigenous peoples and their vast lands, customs, and lives.

City officials and business leaders at the time of the Arch’s construction, too, had sinister motivations. They saw the develop ment as “an enforced slum-clearance pro gram,” proposed by the city’s engineer, W.C. Bernard. At the time, the area housed over 290 businesses through 40 blocks. The Arch’s construction senselessly displaced thousands of workers and families, a majority of them Black and poor. It bulldozed generations, long histories, and homes, placing a metal monstrosity and a concrete park in its place.

19
20

The Arch is a symbol of displacement. At its most transparent, it’s a commemoration of a city that re fused, and still refuses, to protect its residents on the merit of race and income. At its most rosey, it is a symbol of Westward expansion: the removal, massacre, and erasure of tens of millions of Native Americans. I don’t want to worship the Arch. I want to hate it.

So where should we go instead? To take our drunk selfies? To show our visitors? To slap on water bottles, ball caps, and teddy bears? I propose: The Amoco sign.

Let me introduce you to a little gas station on the corner of Clayton and Skinker. Only a stone’s throw from a Starbucks, Hi-Pointe Diner, and Cheshire Inn, this must-see tourist site is conveniently-located. Though under-ad vertised, it’s there you’ll find another “world’s biggest.” The world’s largest Amoco sign.

At 60 by 40 feet, the sign perches on top of a run-of-the-mill gas station overlooking I-64.

With black and bold letters and a warm LED glow, the Amoco sign is honest about what it is trying to sell: gasoline and cigarettes.

Although the company Amoco is now obsolete, bought out by BP in the ’80s, the sign, like the Arch, represents nostalgic memories of the past. The sign reminds native St. Louisians of family trips to the gas station, filled with the promise of sweet candy or a can of pop bought from the station’s small cube-shaped store.

It embodies an essential currency: local recognizability.

As I hop in my Uber downtown, the Amoco sign rings in an entertaining night ahead.

If I squint and look directly Westward, I can see the sickly pale hook of the Arch on the skyline. It’s like the two monuments face each other in a silent and ceaseless battle of will.

Well, I know my winner. As I return from a long night out, the Amoco sign is a guiding light, promising me I’m just minutes from a warm bed. A comforting heat emanates off its gigantic, plastic torch.

Farewell, Arch, you monument of racism and greed. Reni’s tour of St. Louis starts and ends with the Amoco sign, a far more adequate symbol of St. Louis.

21
I PROPSE : THE AMOCO SIGN IT EMBODIES AN ESSENTIAL CURENCY : LOCAL RECOGNIZABILITY 22
23
24

DEATH DINNER of

THE MEAT HEADS

William Satloff, Audrey Engman, Annie Feldman

WRITING: Paola Santiago

EDITING: Nisha Mani

STYLING: Madison Fang, Leena Bekhiet

PHOTOGRAPHY: Ben Levine, Dear Liu

MODELS: Bo Schmidt, Yasmin

McLamb, Nora Goodale, Claire Magnuson, Nick Massenburg

LAYOUT: Andrea Zhou, John Tischke

DIRECTION:

divinity in bovine

Thick lashes rim umber eyes. An ebony gaze pools with starlight. A bloated stomach dappled with salt-and-pepper.

Sides heave, fragile strands shiver, and a mother prays for her son.

I remember warmth scraping along my damp face, welcoming breath into lungs that had never known air. The Sun, a fluorescent birthright, shining frigid steel and peroxide reeking.

As I was born in what should have been rolling meadows tinted by dusk, I could not understand if life was a cherished gift or warranted an apology.

You do not recognize how much hatred a body can encompass. How much rage these joints can hold as I myself am falling apart.

Dissection is not consensual yet you strip meat from my bones, softness lacing your sharp teeth.

Milk froths from starving mouths while bloody drool bubbles, popping and dripping along chapped lips. Bedtime stories collect skeletons, and graveyards are synonymous with deliverance.

To dismantle me— forgotten calfskin jackets, fatty tallow acids in toothpaste and soap, pancreas extracted into insulin that will save someone’s life, just not mine— is to deceive appearances.

I am a machine within a machine, within a machine within a machine until a knife delivers me.

I hope my son finds himself entangled within barbed wire.

I beseech my daughter’s heart stop beating while it can.

A mother’s burden, a bleeding cycle exhaling solely despair.

There is nothing for you out there and there remains nothing for us in here.

29

Consider the icons born over white wine and Union Loafers Pizza; the tales of hookups told and retold, their absurdities probed, engorged, and milked for all they’re worth.

They live only in infamy (or on Wash Ave). You and your friends refer to them by attributes: the one who loved dirty talk, the one who didn’t make a sound, the one who was simply too nice or not nice at all (excused because he’s been

around the block and had the moves to show for it), or the virgin… bless his heart.

We will always remember those cocks we caught, the dicks we dodged, and penises of passion. They are not ours alone, but a collective memory. We present the caricatures of collective experience from survey responses… and further creative liberties.

THE BRAINS BEHIND THE HICKIES

DIRECTION

Hot One With No Moves

We were friends or friends lite Saying hi in passing or occasional late night Instagram DMs Sweet nothings whispered between blue and grey bubbles You goin to Dos Salas?

Wyd after?

Wya?

Come to our table. Slide the addy? I’m here.

Thinks He's a Bengali Tiger, Reincarnated

He had no food in his fridge and a poster of a Bengali Tiger above his bed. Another young professional in New York City with a god complex and an inability, no, an unwillingness to commit. He asked that I call him ‘The Bengali Tiger’ and proceeded to leave me blacked out at a strip club… with no phone… and chlamydia.

We hooked up for two months

Mostly missionary

You’re a freak, aren’t you

I prayed he would surprise me with a quick flip or hair pull or bite

He never did.

35

Please explain how the man bold enough to label himself as “conservative” on Hinge delivers the most courteous and consensual of hookups.

And I mean Conservative. Capital C. Not moder ate, not pretending to be moderate. But the kind of flag saluting, red voting, country club going, out and proud conserative that I can never tell my friends about. They’re ex-Pi Phis. I’d be tar and feathered. But this is the kind of conservative who asks whether I’m comfortable with him kissing my neck or touching my thigh, who presses me up against the fridge and lifts me onto the counter with one hand, while turning the burner off with the other (so as not to burn the brussel sprouts), lusciously, he whispers in my ear, Is this okay?

So even if this new guy doesn’t support my right to choose… At least he values my consent.

Sheep Liberal to Ultra Conservative Pipeline

Toe Tickler

The first time I stayed the night we fell asleep with our toes intertwined. It was weirdly intimate.

36

Big Mistake

We fogged the back windows of our Uber Y’all are making me feel some kind of way, said the driver

I stumble home with a suction mark on my neck Matted hair Shirt stretched and mis-buttoned.

Slightly grinning, mostly ashamed I’ll be crucified if this gets out. I pour myself a cup of coffee and take a scalding shower

Handjob on the Date Bus

We drank a whole bottle of tequila. a whole bottle

Just us two. We stole a salt shaker from Village, a bag of limes from Schnucks

He licked the inside of my wrist And slurped tequila from my clavicle His hand was up my shirt Mine was over his jeans.

37

Band-Aids from the Biter

He's cute enough for a onenight stand

He seems to be learning in the moment.

We’re making out on his Everly couch.

Nice place

He’s a little sloppy but not atrocious.

He bites my bottom lip

There’s a lot of chin licking?

Not a nibble.

Not soft and sensual

But like how you break into an apple,

Or rip open a plastic bag.

A bite. I bleed.

He offers me a band-aid and an Uber home.

38
Then. He Bites.

PostMonogamy

His favorite artist: matisse

Favorite author: david foster wallace (maybe jonathan lethem if a bit more aware)

Favorite musician: phoebe bridgers and kanye

Favorite pastime: making spotify playlists, thrifting, ironic cigarette smoking

Future career: probably law, but I could be an actor if I really wanted to, it’s not that hard

Favorite snack: oat milk latte

First date inquiry: do you think there’s a difference between being pretentious and entitled?

39

“You’re just not that kinda girl.”

“What Kind of girl?

“Ya know, the girl guys date.”

“Excuse me?”

“You’re more the girl guys have fun with. Ya know, before they find the girl they actually want to date.”

Believe it or not, not the worst pillow talk I’ve had.

Not Marriage Material

Short, Hot, Rich, and Disappointing

He’s an aspiring hedge fund manager (just like daddy). Thank god he takes it upon himself to describe (1) what a hedge fund is, (2) how his crypto picks are the next big thing, and (3) his earning potential.

He’s bullish, I’m bearish.

Tomorrow he’ll text me for my FIN400I notes.

Obligatory Ozarks A Welcome Firmness

Something about the Bud Light cigarette combo I couldn’t resist

Save a horse, ride a cowboy

Or a camo boy in this case

He had a golden named Goose A fact that somehow made you fuck him

An obligatory follow on insta after Soon to be blocked after getting a bald eagle tattoo

Things that should be hard in the morning: The crust on a bagel,

A real bagel,

Not the crap they serve here; A banana grabbed on the go, Its peel a greenish-yellow: Not so green that the peel resists removal, No brown spots.

Hard boiled eggs and Underripe avocados and Mugs of black coffee between cupped hands— Anything but morning wood, really. Anything would be preferable to sex at this hour

Mr. Nic & Nut

I’m face down, ass up in a twin XL, wondering if this is supposed to feel good

Right now, it’s not feeling like much of anything. You like that, huh?

No, actually, the repetitive drilling with your not so powerful power tool is not doing it for me He hops off the bed, reaching for something in his discarded pants pocket

He reassumes position, here we go again I hear a faint whirr and feel an immediate shudder I look back to see him, eyes closed in sheer ecstasy, juul in mouth, the glowing green dot illuminating his scrunched face… the vape flashes, mocking me.

41

Close Call— a Haiku

Head between my legs

So close, right there, yes keep going

Nope, that’s just the lip

Apologizer

I’ve never viewed a slumped schlong or fallen sol dier as an indication of inferior manhood, but the incessant apologies that ensue sure dry me out.

I’m sorry. I’m sorry. It’s not you. This never happens.

The next day he tells all of his friends “he smashed.”

I’m secretly thankful Adderall abuse, whiskey chugs, and porn addiction saved me from an hour of clum sy saliva sharing and rhythmless grinding.

Stay soft, soldier. At ease.

42
DIRECTION Michaela ‘‘Mikki’’ Marcille Isabelle Jefferis Ruby Berryman WRITING Michaela ‘‘Mikki’’ Marcille EDITING Kennedy Morganfield ILLUSTRATION Morgan Rogers LAYOUT Sophie Ross John Tischke THE LEXAPROFESSIONALS

LOVE

LEXAPRO

Fucking

sickness and in health.

your overlords, in
IN THE TIME OF

Every day I wake up and take my designated one hundred fifty milligrams of Venlafaxine. Washing it down with my current poison of choice––a stale Coke Zero from the night before––I pray that this time will be different. That it won’t be like my Zoloft-induced mania. Or my Prozac-infused nightmares. Or my Klonopin-inspired delirium. My current situationship doesn’t have that great of an outlook either, I suppose: persistent drowsiness, nausea, lack of sleep, GI issues. My psychiatrist advises me to “give it some time.” And if it doesn’t work out? “Then we could try Lexapro.” She promises me that we’re getting somewhere, that we’re making progress. We’ve established a sort of normalcy, a routineness, in my operating as a living laboratory. She assures me that if we just keep experimenting with different medications, different dosages, different combinations, that something will have to work eventually. It has to.

All this to say, I know what it’s like to hold onto that which is promised to save you by those who claim to care about you. Especially those who are paid to do so. They say that this time will be different, that this time it’s dire, that it’s your very last chance at something better. That it’s your only option for something better. Medication after medication, credit card bill after credit card bill, late statement after late statement, I preserve the hope that my psychiatrist is right. That my medications will

“Instead of treating [the growing problem of stress and distress in capitalist societies] as incumbent on individuals to resolve their own psychological distress, instead, that is, of accepting the vast privatization of stress that has taken place over the last thirty years, we need to ask: how has it become acceptable that so many people, and especially so many young people, are ill?”

—Mark Fisher, Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?

46

—The Congress of the United States of America, United States Declaration of Independence

47

It’s cruel optimism that shackles me to the thought of salvation via pills. Coined by Lauren Berlant, this cruelty refers to the heartache that inevitably follows our attachment to a certain something––an image, a fantasy, a person, an ideology––that is not conducive to our well-being. In fighting for and beside our object of desire, we forget what it means to dream without fated disappointment. It’s the depravity of that which instills hope only to violently strip it away from you. It’s the vicious cycle of turning back to that certain something even though you know, deep down, that it will never save you from yourself.

For the past few years, I have found myself questioning my unhealthy attachment to my reclusive routine of medicating and all of that which follows. I have found myself wondering if mediocrity is really all my life could ever amount to. If I will be forever fettered to trial and error, impossible time management, lost relationships, monthly dosage updates, $10 pill bottles, $25 copays, thousands of dollars of debilitating debt. It’s been almost six years since my first intimate encounter with the mental health industrial complex, and I’m starting to call bullshit. To continue my healing

process without ever questioning or divesting from the very system that claims to be The Supervisor of my healing is to beat a dead horse––a rotting corpse, dying since its inception, immortalized by its overseers, and worshipped in all of its maggot-ridden glory.

Capitalism is the steward of our sickness. Neoliberal policies, freemarket endeavors, and the rise of rugged individualism in a world that requires reconciliation and cooperation to survive are killing us and the world around us. Thousands of people die every day at the bloodstained hands of for-profit health institutions, predatory health insurance providers, debt collectors, and the government of the so-called United States. These private entities, and the state that props them up, thoroughly understand how they manufacture illness through environmental, spiritual, and cultural desecration and force the public into a constant state of dependence. How else would they be able to sell us their cures?

And yet, I keep taking my pills. I keep experimenting with different antidepressants, different benzos, different concoctions of antidepressants and benzos, all in a desperate attempt to save myself, knowing full well that this can never be enough. That this will never be sustainable. In the same way that my hundreds of milligrams of medications will never cure me in a society designed to keep me sick, voting in self-identified progressives into positions of power will never save us in an economic system designed to kill us ten times over, and once more for good measure. Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,

Ilhan Omar, Cori Bush, and other representatives that liberals, and even some leftists, sanctify often paint themselves as the arbiters of health reform, parading radical aesthetics without enacting radical change. Using phrases like “Medicare for All” and “Tax the Rich” without simultaneously seeking to abolish the very country that makes private healthcare and disgusting levels of wealth possible is not radical. Because of the very nature of capital and of the corporatist state, you will never see these dignified federal officials proposing the abolition of private healthcare or predatory corporations as a whole, even if said progressives employ alluring leftist terminology. These people are, at best, welfare capitalists masquerading as revolutionary icons. It is not revolutionary to advocate for change within a capitalist framework, and it is fundamentally unhelpful that these politicians consistently co-opt and contort revolutionary sentiments into seductive buzzwords, neatly tucking them into preexisting neoliberal frameworks. Representing a country that puts profit over human life and mindless productivity over passion is not radical. Meanwhile, people from all corners of progressive politics bow at the feet of national icons

that defend a country founded on our blood.

I understand the desire to cling to those that loosely promise salvation. I do it every day when I down my handful of pills. While medications do have the potential to offer me a sense of normalcy and progress in the moment––much like the promises offered by progressive politicians––they will never promise to entirely sever me from that which ails me. My path towards holistic healing requires more than just pills––it requires the abolition of the social conditions that aid in the fabrication of my illnesses. Despite this knowledge, I remain tethered to my pills in a similar vein to those who remain strapped to the boots of the political elite.

At the same time, however, this is precisely where the analogy between pills and politicians falls short: while pills can be a helpful and supplemental part of a holistic healing process––one that takes into account the whole person and the social conditions in which they are situated––neoliberal politicians will never be a useful part of our movement towards liberation. AOC and the rest of The Squad can spew all the pledges and vows and national oaths that they want, but it does not change the fact that we remain subject to the horrors of profit-driven medicine, the rotten aesthetics of the political elite, and the skewed desires of American corporations.

49

CAPITALISM IS THE STEWARD OF OUR SICKNESS.

50
51

It doesn’t have to be this way. It is our obligation to denounce a system that actively harms our well-being. We don’t need to place our optimism, our time, our energy into deified governmental officials to get the care that we want, the care that we need. We don’t need to base our precious lives upon the desires and political moves of those who don’t know us. An alternative world is possible, and it’s not just some communist pipe dream.

Alternative worlds already exist––in the alleyways, the nooks, the obscured corners of late-stage capitalism. They exist in the work of queer disabled scholars, like Leah Lakshmi PiepznaSamarasinha, who ask us to question hyper-individuality and reconfigure our self-centered perceptions of access and care. Or even in the work of Raj Patel and Dr. Rupa Marya, who argue for a health politic that not only recognizes the havoc that colonial cosmologies have wreaked on our bodies, our environments, and our worlds, but one that demands an alternative: the deep medicine of decolonization. Colonialism and industrialization are joint shareholders in our suffering, and it is only through that understanding can we strive for a better world––one where health isn’t a monopolistic enterprise or a trillion-dollar industry that primes us for sickness through the pillaging of communities and the natural world.

Alternative worlds exist beyond the confines of bound books and distinguished doctors. MARSH is just one living manifestation of what health sovereignty and solidarity economies could look like in St. Louis and beyond. MARSH (Materializing and Activating Radical Social Habitus), beyond being a sliding-scale grocery store, is a worker-owned cooperative, a living experiment in generative food systems, an urban farm, a kitchen, a diner,

a gathering space, a home. They prioritize worker/producer/ consumer ownership, democratic participation, food and housing sovereignty, ecological health, and economic justice. In addressing the very systems that make us sick and offering tangible means to new ends, MARSH seeks to stitch the wounds of late-stage capitalism and revive the insurgent dimensions of communal love. Looking beyond St. Louis, there’s Cooperation Jackson just two states over in Mississippi. They define themselves as “an emerging vehicle for sustainable community development, economic democracy, and community ownership.” With the long-term goal of developing a network of four interdependent institutions (i.e. a federation of local worker cooperatives, a cooperative incubator, a cooperative education and training center, and a cooperative bank), Cooperation Jackson is in the process of building a proven democratic alternative to a world that thrives off of submission, exploitation, and theft.

American capitalism––and the American empire itself––had its start, and it will have its end. To this inevitable end, there must be collective support for alternative structures that recognize the tragedies that existing social and political systems inflict upon our individual and collective well-being. Our futures depend on these alternative structures to help us both survive the contemporary moment and to keep ourselves alive well beyond the very end––a noble task that politicians and my Venlafaxine could merely dream of achieving. We have only one of two options: demand for a world built on love and mutual respect, or continue as-is and willingly damn our futures to the blood-soaked hands and sutured mouths of the political elite.

IT IS THE DEPRAVITY OF THAT WHICH INSTILLS HOPE ONLY TO VIOLENTLY STRIP IT AWAY FROM YOU.

For centuries, the image of the perfect housewife stood at the pinnacle of femininity. In this femininity, however, she pro moted a lifestyle of double bind oppression: to be independent but submissive, to be educated but not aspirational, to be always available but never liberated. When this iconic housewife is just imagined, she’s infallible—but when she becomes personified, failure is inevitable.

DIRECTION: Aliya Hollub, Josie Zimmerman, Alex McLaughlin STYLING: Aliya Hollub, Lea Bond PHOTOGRAPHY: Alex McLaughlin, Aliya Hollub, Lily Kapner MODELS: Lea Bond LAYOUT: Annabel Gillespie THE HOMEMAKERS & HOME-WRECKERS
58
59
62
64

Utilizing agents – celebrity chefs, senators’ wives, QVC queens – American media has promoted the image of the housewife in endless iterations. They probe our insecu rities and our expectations for the cook ie-cutter performance of domesticity. The housewife urges us to buy the gadget to save our casseroles, to save our children, to save our marriages. She promises that by perfecting our potroasts and snuffing out stains, our lives can be a fantasy, just like theirs. But this polka-dotted illusion has lost its luster. When an agent’s actions misalign with their portrayed character, her performance loses conviction. Cracks have formed on the porcelain veneer of the idolized homemaker, but it is no longer her job to put herself back together.

65
66

depressed, deified

RESIDENT SAD GIRLS

DIRECTION: Kennedy Morganfield, Haley Harris

WRITING

EDITING

Haley Harris

Meyme Nakash

Grace Demba, Helen Piloto

LAYOUT

DIGITAL ILLUSTRATION

Annabel Gillespie

:
:
ILLUSTRATION:
&
:

The draw of depressed white female intellectuals like Susan Sontag, Sylvia Plath, and Joan Didion lies in the eloquent articulations, of difficult, sticky emotions. The driving force of their works is the isolating, yet enticing experience of “feeling like nothing is real but everything is in reach” (“Wearing my Joan Didion Dress,” Josephine O’Brien). Layers of privilege and possibility accompany this existential angst. What are the pitfalls of packaging feelings into the works of sad literary women because we don’t know what else to do?

“A photograph is both a pseudo-pres ence and a token of absence. Like a wood fire in a room, photographs—especially those of people, of distant landscapes and faraway cities, of the vanished past—are incitements to reverie. The sense of the unattainable that can be evoked by photographs feeds directly into the erotic feelings of those for whom desirability is enhanced by distance.” – Susan Sontag, On Photography.

69

March 27, 2020

When Dad found a lightly-used vintage copy of Joan Didion’s The White Album at Salvation Army, he pasted onto the front cover a post-it note with my name and tucked it into a hand-knit stocking. Christmas morning, I leafed through the pages, cherished the colors of the cover, and flipped it around to reveal a full-page black and white of Didion herself. In profile, she stares contemplatively toward the bottom left of the frame. Her arm rests slightly askew, clad in a gray cashmere sweater. Blurred picture frames line the domestic space behind her. She is immersed in thought, her eyes glazed over and her mind tortured as if piecing together the minutiae of her next story. Her demeanor, however, remains elegant. The threadbare “voice of a generation,” Didion contemplates the grief of a decade with a gaze distressed yet palatable, a gaze of culturally-managed sorrow.

“I remember you liked,” my Dad said, “that thing you told me about,” he gestured his hands in a circle, “about the forest fires.” Our moment of connection lingering on the tip of his tongue.

“Fire Season,” I said.

I’d been assigned Didion’s 1989 essay in high school. The piece lyrically outlines the devastation of wildfires sprawling from Malibu Canyon to greater Los Angeles from the 1960s through the 1980s. My reading the piece was an arbitrary detail Dad had compulsively attached to. A way of knowing me from a distance. His interest in my interest in Joan Didion became my way of feeling close to him. Both of us leaning toward beautified catastrophe.

I opened The White Album on a somewhat unfamiliar shoreline years later. It collected dust on a stack under my mother’s bedside table until I returned to California at the start of the pandemic.

As I creased open the first page, my younger brother jumped playfully between tidepools. The princess is caged in the consulate. The man with the candy will lead the children into the sea. The sun was concealed, and the abandoned beach had more rocks than

sand. We had driven to Malibu from East Los Angeles. It was the day before California’s Statewide Stay-at-Home order, and we were hopelessly struck with cabin fever. Taking the Old Volvo north of Point Dume, north of Zuma Beach, we avoided gatherings on main beaches; we yearned to dip our toes in the water. The sky held a great grief. A greyish gravity.

I needed to read something that reflected reality back at me. Or, should I say, I needed a moody and immaculate ly-articulated version of reality to sink my teeth into. To project onto. To hold everything for a bit.

70

October 15, 2021

For the life of me, I can’t finish the Susan Sontag Biography I started last Winter. It’s been nearly a year now since I first cracked it open, when, after a brisk walk to Subterranean Books on Delmar, I snagged it from the “recommended” shelf. I’d just read “On Photography” for class, and an employee’s review was glowing: “a personal dive into what created one of the most

prominent cultural commentators of our time.”

I’m in my reading-for-pleasure era, I’d told myself, my fingers freezing on the walk to my apartment, feeling acutely then my yearning to be self-actualized and knowledgeable. Or to be perceived as such.

Here it is on my bedside table, at the top of a stack of books I’ve started and never finished— evidence of my shrinking atten tion span— or the catalyst for some deeper realization. Do I want to read a Susan Sontag biography or be the kind of person who reads a Susan Sontag biography?

I’ve looked more at the book’s cover than its content. Sontag sits at her desk in a white button-down shirt, elbows propped up on her white linoleum desk. A pack of Marlboros sits on a folded newspaper. A half-smoked cigarette perched snuggly between her fingers. Her grasp is noncha lant yet purposeful. The shelves behind her, arranged perfectly with mid-century asymmetry, hold books primarily. Some have sleek, contemporary spines, while others look ancient—gold-text encrusted bricks. A slew of artifacts sprinkle the shelves: small paintings, a jewelry box, an anemone sculpture, a vase, a dish with vegetal detailing. Surely, she is a woman with eclectic tastes—her site of inspira tion filled to the brim with cross-genre, cross-cultural influences. All held precariously and attractively together.

Sontag is at work, her typewriter adjusted to one side, ready to begin writing another line. A floral mug sits in front of her; perhaps she’s just finished a cup of coffee. Her glance is situated to one side. She smiles widely, as though a visiting friend has just cracked a joke in the middle of an intellectual conversation.

71

This suaveness is both cerebral and social. Her gaze radiates a curious but self-as sured glow. Her eyes emit warmth while subtly graying hairs frame her forehead. Though the image is staged, her ease con vinces the viewer otherwise.

I cannot look at this without thinking of Sontag’s own words: “To take a photograph is to participate in another person’s mor tality, vulnerability, mutability. Precisely by slicing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to time’s relentless melt” (Sontag, On Photography). Though the photograph has come to represent Sontag’s persona, it is, in actuality, a split-second, brief, curated access to her world. To place

eternal value on an image is to reveal the deeper impulse in capturing a subject: to memorialize. To see Sontag in this image is to commemorate her.

Perhaps the book beneath that pho tograph, sitting on my bedside table and spanning over 800 pages, would allow me entry into her world. It would also make me the person who has actually read a Susan Sontag biography. I’d probably be better for it.

But for now, I’ll keep it on my bedside table. Until I’m willing to follow through, or until the day I admit to myself the limita tions of my willingness to see the full picture.

72
DIRECTION Isabelle Jefferis Meyme Nakash Elizabeth Barrick WRITING Elizabeth Barrick Michaela “Mikki” Marcille EDITING Michaela “Mikki” Marcille PHOTOGRAPHY Jessie Goodwin ILLUSTRATION Sarah Wang STYLING Coco Yuan LAYOUT Sophie Ross John Tischke Annabel Gillespie MODELS Lily Vereen Yabsera Bekele Bo Schmidt Iggy Xie Felix Moreno OBSESSED LUV2DEATH STAN DIE4THIS WANNABE THE BLING RING TRUE CRIME THE TOXIC STANS & SUPER FANS

image

image message

I can't say I've ever been a superfan of anything. For the most part, I missed out on the mass hysteria of mid-2000s preteen ogling over One Direction and the Jonas Brothers. This isb't because "I'm not like other girls," but more because my parents banned Disney Channel and only played 80s disco hits in the car. I wasn't entirely separated from pop culture as a pubescent girl, though. I crushed hard on Draco Malfoy and fervently read each and every teen dystopian novel I could get my hands on. Yet my affection for Draco Malfoy's sly smirk and what I believed to be the literary genius of Divergent never extended particularly far.

Perhaps it is my distance from the modern "stan" that piques my interest in what makes them tick. I am in a sort of twisted awe of the devotion, the dedication, and the limitless ador-ation that such disciples have for their idols.

WANNABE

WANNA BE

image

In anticipation of a recent haircut

appointment, my friend and I scrolled and pinpointed internet reference photos to show our respective stylists at the salon. My friend had prepared screenshots of Monica from Friends. I had images of Rachel. We both find the show to be entertaining, but our interest in the series admittedly stems from the show’s aesthetics. I appreciate Jennifer Aniston’s beauty both now and when Friends first aired, but I can’t say there is any part of me that wishes to resemble her beyond matching highlights.

It’s no surprise that young people use their celebrity idols as inspiration for their appearance. The entire business of celebrity sponsorships and the foundation of the influencer economy relies on the desire to look like those we admire. But there are thresholds where admiration contorts into obsession. Where a want-to-look-like twists into a want-to-be.

We’ve seen the news stories of those who take plastic surgery too far in desperate attempts to look like those they adore. They inject, pull, and whittle away at their features until their faces are hyperbolized caricatures of human beings. Those who go under the knife time and time again to wholly transform their image sit with a pleased nonchalance during interviews with TMZ or People or The Sun.

It makes me wonder if these individuals are truly happy with who they turn themselves into. Are they content, or is it denial that drives their emotions? It also makes me wonder who agrees to perform the operations desired by those obsessed with attaining the unattainable. Are they wrong for irrevocably changing features,, or are they simply doing what the customer wants? Besides, plenty of individuals use photos of celebrities for their dream noses or chins or breasts, so where is the line that demarcates inspiration from unhealthy obsession?

76

THE BLING RING

It’s 2008. The gentle curvature of prehistoric flip phones can be seen outlined in the velour of Juicy Couture tracksuits everywhere. Hair is teased and bouffanted to the gods. Lips are icy and eyes are lined in black kohl. Over-saturated, collaged paparazzi images of Paris Hilton and her contemporaries cover the facades of magazines lining the grocery-store checkout lines. Their wealth, youth, and beauty are flaunted to masses of adolescents waiting behind their caretakers while a store clerk slowly scans produce.

It is no surprise, then, that prepubescent tweens idolized these sparkling figures of luxury and glamour. Middle schoolers everywhere layered their tunics over lowrise jeans. Small dogs, real or toy, suddenly materialized in purses. Yearning to one day be as cool, as skinny, as sultry as Paris Hilton or Lindsey Lohan or Amanda Bynes.

Some invited this idolization into the rituals of their young lives. Those who lived far from Southern California adopted the catty superficiality of the Hollywood elite. Others dressed in tight, short clothing that made their mothers’ lips purse together.

Then there were the ones who would do anything, anything at all, to be Paris or Lindsey or Amanda.

In October of 2008, a group of seven teenagers, dubbed “The Bling Ring,” broke into the home of none other than Paris Hilton. Over the next year, this group went on to rob over fifty celebrities, stealing approximately three million dollars worth of cash and luxury goods. Their motivations were two-fold. One, celebrities were public figures. Their whereabouts were constantly reported by TMZ and other celebrity-focused publications, so the Bling Ring knew when

image
77
THE BLING RING

certain homes were vacant and open for the taking. Two, the group wanted to live the luxurious and glamorous life that Hilton and her contemporaries so publicly touted. The culprits chose Paris, as well as their other targets because of their inexhaustible reservoirs of affluence and highly influential style. They stole that which they themselves so badly wanted. One of the burglars even referred to their antics as “going shopping.”

Paris Hilton’s brand, persona, and being were centered around her seemingly limitless wealth. Rooted in stark materialism, her life of partying and leisure quickly became the aspiration of the masses. In this way, it’s no surprise that Paris (and her fellow targets) were robbed of the items so intrinsically tied to their public image: designer clothing, jewelry, and cash.

Even when facing the legal repercussions of her actions, Bling Ring Member, Alexis Neiers, wore Bebe kitten heels to her trial. An unremitting fixation on demonstrated, embodied wealth.

image 78

TRUE CRIME

When I was in the sixth grade, my main interests included hiking, watching Modern Family, and riding on my friends’ razor scooters. I wasn’t particularly literate in internet culture at the time, but I had friends who were. They would show me videos like “Charlie the Unicorn” and let me play on their Minecraft servers. Somewhere around that era, a few of my more culturally-aware friends told me about “Slender Man.” I, of course, had never heard of the mystical being that

first appeared in the dark corners of the Internet, slowly spreading across online forums like an ink drop in a pool of water. When they told me his origin story, I didn’t think much of it. Though I was spooked at the time, I moved on with my life.

Slender Man’s influence manifested differently in the lives of Anissa Weier and Morgan Geyser, two young women who met in the sixth grade and bonded over their shared affinity for the elusive

79
TRUE CRIME

image

demon. As their friendship grew, so did their investment in Slender Man. Their fascination gradually morphed into obsession, leading them to commit heinous crimes as Slender Man’s proxies. Ultimate devotion was confirmed by stabbing their friend, Payton Leutner, nineteen times in 2014 after luring her out into the Wisconsin wilderness.

This particular example of violent obsession is especially relevant considering Weier is to be released from prison in the coming weeks. In the eyes of the law, she is properly rehabilitated. She is considered “good” and psychologically recovered from her murderous behavior. Leutner’s family disagrees.

image

While Weier and Geyser may be the youngest perpetrators of such terrible crimes, they are certainly not alone in their homicidal expressions of affection. Mark Chapman was a fan of John Lennon. He went on to shoot John in the archway of his apartment. Yolanda Saldívar was the president of a Selena fan club. Saldivar shot Selena in 1995. Followers of Charles Manson carried out murder sprees, spurred by devotional fanhood.

The blurring of the lines between adoration and demise occurs with horrifying frequency—bringing new meaning to the phrase “I love you to death.” Case studies such as these leave us wondering: how does love become so dark? Perhaps answers can be found in the places where infatuation conflates with potent peaks in consumer culture, with an ever-pervasive internet landscape, or with the precarious faultlines of capitalism, wherein constantly expanding markets try to sell us flattened, re-packaged notions of beauty and ultimately, happiness.

80
this is her!
DIRECTION Nisha Mani, Lambo Perkins . WRITING Grace Gore . EDITING Sophie Goldstein, Logan Krohn, Haley Harris . STYLING Avery Johnson . PHOTOGRAPHY Jessie Goodwin, Bryanna Mendez . MODEL Avery Johnson . LAYOUT John Tischke . THE AVERY JOHNSON FAN CLUB :

Avery JOHNSON

I first met Avery Johnson in early October. She invited me into her palace: a studio at the Sam Fox School of Art and Design. Located on the second floor of Bixby Hall, the room is a balance between empty spaces and pockets of mess.

Materials of budding creations emerge from every corner: a string of pearls bubbles out of a half closed cabinet, red fabric is clumped in the corner, a white feather boa constricts around the ceiling scaffolding, drying ink prints meditate on a window ledge, and a single pink ostrich feather tickles the granite floor. I find bot tles of glitter, copious ink, toys, doodles, and power tools on her supply rack. The studio-cube is enclosed by empty white walls, with the exception of a small col lage of copy-printed photos facing a sturdy desk. One steel table, pushed up against the opposite wall, holds a mini TV and a tray of hot pink lighters. Two gigantic win dows keep the room flooded with natural light and views of Forsyth. She offers me a seat in a cheetah patterned, stiletto shaped lounger, while she perches in her desk chair. Avery’s zebra-printed loafers dangle a few inches from the floor.

Sam Fox students spend most of their time in their studios. Avery is known for liv ing in hers. Whether working weeks ahead on a school project, prepping upcoming events for her art collective, or perfecting a passion piece, Avery is always creating; for better or for worse. “It’s not that I want to make things, I need to..... I have to, I get a little crazy about it,” the BFA senior states.

Avery draws from a wide array of mediums such as photography, printmak ing, and fiber manipulation. Her work is an active meditation on themes in her life. Avery tells me about the collage of photos above her working desk, her “mood board,” as she calls it. As she recalls each artist and work, her eyes dart energetically from the photos to me and back as she describes her biggest inspirations. The wallet-sized printouts depict pieces by photographers and artists like Laura Aguilar, David Hammons, and Francesca Woodman. Diverse in media, approach, and age, all of the artists seem to focus on representing their bodies as the subject of their practice.

WHO IS THE PRINCESS OF PRINTMAKING? THE MOTHER OF PUNISH BABIES? THE PEARLAND-FRINGECLAD ICON OF BIXBY HALL?

“I’m interested in artists who use their bodies as compositional tools,” Avery explains. “My go-to line for artist statements is body as subject and substrate, so the body that is being depicted is also the tool being used to make it.”

Avery takes the time to walk me through the biographies of each of her favorite artists, pinpointing dates and names off the top of her head. She has a clear knowledge and appreciation for the radical artists that came before her along with their unabated confrontation with self identity. Avery’s own work reflects those same values, she understands the subversive power of the personal which she boldly wields.

She offers me the box of pink lighters which, upon closer examination, each depict different proportions of a woman taking her shirt off. The woman is, of course, Avery. Lined up in a row, the shades of the lighters transition from baby pink to fuschia and back again as each one depicts a different part of the process. The stark white of her shirt contrasts the dark shadows created by the contours of her body. Avery’s face is never revealed. What I had initially thought to be just cute, pink lighters now held me captive. Each lighter is a frozen moment of some thing equally vulnerable and benign.

MY GO-TO LINE FOR ARTIST STATE MENTS IS BODY AS SUBJECT AND SUBSTRATE, SO THE BODY THAT IS BEING DEPICT ED IS ALSO THE TOOL BEING USED TO MAKE IT.

Avery explains that the idea behind the piece is to observe the body through the eyes of modern day capitalism, especially in relation to sex work and exploitation of the female form. For her vision to truly come to life, Avery want ed an audience to react to her creations.

An installation of the lighters was displayed in Steinberg Hall from October 4th to 18th, 2021. The lighters were presented in a pink case which had “$1” written across the top. Next to them, she placed a glass tip jar. Avery char acterizes the display as a “prolonged performance” because she was more interested in how viewers might inter act with the lighters than any quality of

83
84
86

the objects themselves. How many lighters would be taken? How much money would be in the jar? Which lighters would be left?

“Because the images are stills from a video of me taking my shirt off, there’s a really awkward moment the viewer has to make in deciding which level of boob they are gonna take. Surprisingly, the most boob ones have been taken the least,” Avery comments, sifting through the remaining lighters.

At the end of each day, Avery would go to Steinberg, meticulously log the progress, and restock the case. This process was repeated until all 150 of the lighters she made ran out. She found that about half of the lighters were being stolen. When I ask her how much money she had made so far, she quickly guesses around $20, but seems less interested in her profit than I am. As she continues to admire the whittled down case of lighters before her, I can tell she is just happy that her work is leaving an impression.

You wouldn’t know it from looking at the lighters, but Avery was having a bad day when she shot the stills printed on them. Partly because of her demanding role as both subject and photographer, partly because she didn’t feel like taking pictures of herself that day.

“It’s a really taxing process because you have to take these pictures of yourself, then you have to look in your camera, and try to look at the images from an artistic perspective, but at the same time of course your mind is thinking ‘I look disgusting. Why am I doing this?”’ Self-portraiture is the genre Avery has become most familiar with, creating both out of the con venience of being her own model and also the nature of her inqui ry. While Avery is often her own model, centering her body in her work is not comfortable territo ry. Like many of us, she has days

where body insecurities invade her mindspace. What sets Avery apart is that those days are what fuel her to confront societal issues through personal exploration and inventive methodology.

“With the type of topics I’m addressing, like body image issues and the sexualization of the female body, it doesn’t feel fair for me to subject another body to that same ridicule. I feel like if I want to explore these issues that come from a place of deep pain for me, I need to use myself to do so.”

The pursuit of authentic expres sion in spite of discomfort charac terizes Avery’s artistic dedication. It allows for catharsis. Creation is a necessity for Avery; it’s how she navigates the world and makes sense of her experiences. This ability to repurpose strong emotions into tan gible forms has tantalized her since middle school.

Avery’s upbringing in Los Angeles is inseparable from her artistry. The city’s influence, both

87
IT’S A REALLY TAXING PROCESS BECAUSE YOU HAVE TO TAKE THESE PICTURES OF YOURSELF, THEN YOU HAVE TO LOOK IN YOUR CAMERA, AND TRY TO LOOK AT THE IMAGES FROM AN ARTISTIC PERSPECTIVE, BUT AT THE SAME TIME OF COURSE YOUR MIND IS THINKING ‘I LOOK DISGUSTING. WHY AM I DOING THIS?’”

generative and at times, harmful, has led her to topics and mediums that she continually revisits, while also ingrain ing long-lived insecurities.

“I felt different in a bad way because I wasn’t as thin or as pretty as everyone else. The atmosphere of LA has this lasting sense of ridicule and superfici ality,” Avery says.

Avery’s first exposure to celebri ties wasn’t flipping through the glossy pages of magazines. Instead, she was seeing them everyday around town and going to school with their children. However, she explains LA’s impact on her burgeoning self-esteem without even a twinge of resentment or regret in her voice. Avery’s frank reflection suggests that she has come to terms with her inner struggles, even if they have yet to be fully conquered.

In a time where Avery felt like she didn’t belong, she clung tight to spaces where she could flourish. Filmmaking was the first medium to pique her inter est because it gave her the opportuni ty to be experimental. To create the worlds of her imagination.

Avery’s early film work prioritized cinematography and production design. Although the artist has since expanded her range of mediums since middle school, she is still in touch with her filmic origins. Recently, Avery has been spending time creating videos and gleaning still shots from them. She often displays photos in series, giving the illusion of motion. Photography may seem like a natural transition for a young cinematographer, however, Avery recalls that it was actually a fam ily competition that sparked her craft.

freedom. At the same time, Avery is acutely aware of her role as an artist, and aims to heighten and critique the theme of viewership in her photography. Describing her current practice, she explains,“I incorporate layers of separation between the subject and the view er, like shooting screens or having something in front of the camera lens. It’s about the process of feeling aware of being watched.”

Avery has honed this awareness, from her LA upbringing to becom ing an icon herself on WashU’s campus. Her idiosyncratic and unapologetically funky style cannot help but garner attention from her peers. It even gave rise to an unof ficial fan club consisting of a few keen onlookers who enthusiastically discussed Avery’s fashion sense and artistry to anyone but her. Avery, laughing in confession, says, “The fan club was three people who were obsessed with me and would freak out when they saw me, but then never bothered to get to know me. They liked this picture that they con structed of me, but didn’t bother to penetrate beyond the surface.”

Yet Avery’s openness from the moment I clicked “record” con vinced me that her eccentric authen ticity is not just for artistic production, but is rather an embodied value she practices in her everyday life.

Perhaps Avery’s brief confron tation with iconozation herself fur thered her fascination with women from history who found themselves under public speculation. Marilyn Monroe, Brittney Spears, and Princess Diana are all figures who

During a Thanksgiving dinner years ago, Avery’s grandpa promised her and her cousins that whoever could become a professional photographer first would win a signed copy of an Ansel Adams book, an artist that is considered “the grandfather of landscape photography.” Being only 10 at the time, Avery was not really interested in the prize as much as the spirit of competition. Her parents, who always encouraged her artistic exploration, donated a bathroom in the house as a makeshift darkroom to help Avery develop her skill. She would spend whole days developing her photos, oblivious to anything outside of the four tiled walls. Even as the excitement of competition waned, her passion for photography remained. For Avery, whose foundational years were spent in a world where others’ per ceptions held too much weight, being behind the camera provides a sense of

have prompted thought and cre ation for Avery. Icons in their own right, but also women who were tortured by the media. However, she is careful to not create art that may further exploit their images. While the images of iconized women are often curated to perfection for pub lic consumption, Avery’s research, inversely, explores a far less glamor ous underbelly.

“I think sticking out can define an icon, but also this mystery and dis tance. I don’t think someone can be an icon if you really know them.”

The consequences of iconization are not lost on Avery, but she does believe many icons are worthy of the title because of how they boldly embrace standing out. While consid ering herself an icon is difficult for Avery to wrap her head around, she does believe that people gravi tate towards her because she does not fear spectacle.

“I don’t know if I’m an icon, but I do know that I’m not afraid to stand out and I think that a lot of people struggle with themselves and that’s their biggest fear. I don’t have a lot of stress about gaining attention.”

88
I INCORPORATE LAYERS OF SEPARATION BETWEEN THE SUBJECT AND THE VIEWER... IT’S ABOUT THE PROCESS OF FEELING AWARE OF BEING WATCHED.”

Avery’s idol and fashion icon, Iris Apfel, shares the same unbothered sentiment when it comes to public attention. Adorned in vibrant pieces that flow, fold, and fluff, Apfel not only embraces the attention she gains from her outlandish style, but fully rejects convention. She develops and adheres to her own blueprints of visibility and value. Even at the age of 100, “Iris still puts on a fit everyday.” The Netflix documentary, Iris, lives rent free in Avery’s mind. She recites her favorite quote from the film, something someone once told Apfel:

“You’re not pretty, you’ll never be pretty, but you’ve got style and that’s much more important.”

Avery doesn’t like this quote in a “self-depecrate-y” way, but rather because it reminds her that her intuitive style and creativity is something that is hers alone. Oh, and she knows that she can dress.

In another life I can envision Avery as a personal stylist. For the self-proclaimed “Ebay pro,” thrifting is a lifestyle, not an occasional activity. Avery’s process does not include following trends or buying new clothes. She simply envisions outfits and then goes and finds eclectic articles similar to the ones she imagines.

I had the chance to visit Avery’s apartment on Kingsbury Avenue, where she houses her repertoire of one-of-akind pieces. My closet envy swelled as I

scanned a pair of vintage black Gucci sunglasses, a gothic lace dress from the 30s, a pair of red ballet flat inspired loafers. Avery takes immense pride in her collection of finds. These aren’t simply articles of clothing or accessories, but declarations of self.

While Avery might not accept herself as an icon, it is clear that she has left her mark on the WashU community. Not only does she grace our campus with exciting fashion statements, but she also incites creativity among Sam Fox art students outside of their course assignments.

As an art student herself, Avery has struggled with creating on her own terms. She expresses gratitude for her Sam Fox education, but finds that art school assignments can be limiting to an artists’ unfiltered self-expression. She explains, “When you get school prompts, you begin to feel like you’re appeasing your pro fessor and not making space for reflection about what you feel like making in that moment.” To her, an artist’s work is not always obligated to be so profound. If an artist draws inspiration from writing “POOP” repeatedly in her notebook then she should feel free to do so. Safe to say, Avery has done so. Just check out her instagram account.

From one quick peruse of her art instagram “@averyfarts,” one can find a close-up video of Avery licking a mir ror, a is a print of half of Avery’s face as she stares into your soul, a video of her dancing with a puppet in tow, the caption reading “fuck wit us.” A prevailing theme across the grid of chaotic, jocular content is the color pink, which emanates from the page like a sugary perfume.

Avery is confident in what she wants her art to be. Serious perceptions of body and gender are paired with cheek iness and positivity in ways that are unexpected, yet intentional. She talks about the body as not a site for pain and concealment, but for celebration and enjoyment. Avery agonizes over her art

89
YOU’RE NOT PRETTY, YOU’LL NEVER BE PRETTY, BUTYOU’VE GOT STYLE AND THAT’S MUCH MORE IMPORTANT.

practices and how she can best align them with her values, but she also allows her intu ition to guide her. The result is art that is thought-provoking, but not forced. The rawness of both her work and personality is what draws me and many others to the art ist. Avery embraces the emotions that come with creating. She infuses fun into her pro cesses, she documents her tears, and shares her moments of pure looniness.

“The Punish Babies,” an art collective co-founded by Avery and her friend, Kale Day, began as an idea for the two student artists to showcase their art to a wider audi ence. After their successful first apartment show, other student-artists began asking to be a part of future projects. Now, “The Punish Babies” offers not only a refuge to Avery and Kale, but other Sam Fox students. The intent of the collective has evolved into offering an outlet for student artists to rupture the routines of making art soley for school. “The Punish Babies” do everything from publishing zines to organizing local art shows that showcase student talent, donating their proceeds to worthwhile community causes around the Saint Louis area. What started out as an idea in Avery’s head has now grown into a movement of her own making.

On a Saturday afternoon in late October, I attended The Punish Babies’ fifth art show, Cake Walk. Organized in the backyard of a home on McPherson Avenue, Cake Walk featured local student artwork, sprawled out across the grass for viewers to peruse and purchase. Tent Mission STL, an unhoused advocate organization, received all proceeds from the show.

In line with her ideologies surrounding artmaking, Avery informs me, “We wanted our artists to display work that was fun for them to make.”

Walking around the yard, I see t-shirts blowing on clotheslines, piles of abstract prints, and a box of multicolored dolls (all sewn by Avery). I recall how Avery told me she stumbled upon art by accident as I stand in the middle of a field surrounded by acts of deliberate, unabashed creation. A semicircle of artists sit in lawn chairs talking and watching people observe their work. Avery sits among them in a cap sleeve pink chiffon blouse, witnessing her own ripple effect.

Killing the costumed cop: SUPERHEROS & THE STATUS QUO

THE SUPER STAFF

DIRECTION: Sophi Seley, Ali Meltzer

WRITING: Michaela “Mikki” Marcille, Sophi Seley, Maeve Collins

EDITING: Nisha Mani STYLING: Faith Phillips, Ali Meltzer

PHOTOGRAPHY: Alex McLaughlin, Logan Krohn, Ali Meltzer, Faith Phillips

MODELS: Jay Kim, Matthew Rockwell, Joe Kim, Peter Bukary, Delton Utsey

LAYOUT: Andrea Zhou, John Tischke

THANK YOU TO our friends at Rockin Jump Trampoline Park St. Louis

With Liberty and Justice for None

It’s one thing to tell people that there’s a world of possibility, and another thing to have them experience it. But when our collective imaginaries are stifled by a dominant cre ative culture that embraces submission and incriminates insurgence, in what ways are we allowed to dream?

Along the endless avenues institutions venture to curb our fantasies, nothing seems to saturate and manipulate the American psyche more than the superhero. The public’s bizarre fascination with these national icons often treads the line of fanatical obsession. Out of all the potential stock characters to casually worship, why is it that superheroes have such a grip on our collective consciousness? Black Panther hauled in $192 million in its debut weekend. Disneyland recently opened an Avengers-themed alternate universe, and Google just identified Harley Quinn as the seventh most popular Halloween costume this past holiday season. All to say, super heroes exist at the summit of American cultural iconography, permeating the fabric of our everyday lives.

The inherent superficiality of superhero media does not seem to drive us away. Though often only pseudo-analyzing our relationship to the contemporary sociopolitical moment, superheroes remain at the pinnacle of American egoism. At the heart of every mainstream superhero is a patriotic supersoldier, revered and idol ized by the public and cherished by our

beloved state-sanctioned warmongers as an unabashed defender of the state, of the status quo. We’re taught that some people have special powers that make them better than the masses, and that those with such powers will save us from some mythical, treacherous Other. Oftentimes, these saviors are white, and if not white, then exploited through Hollywood’s diversity initiatives that oftentimes position people of color as fronts for white causes. Any POC positioned as antithetical to the United States’ colonial mission, however, wouldn’t be advocated for.

As the trope goes, superheroes are the Good Guys; those that resist hegemony are the Bad Guys, the misguided souls that have good politics but execute them in “all the wrong ways.” The Flag Smashers in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier are an anarchist group that dreams of a better world without borders, homelessness, and class division. However, their revolutionary politics and armed strategies position them as the enemy. Killmonger in Black Panther also dreams of overthrowing the reigning world order through armed tactics, but is often perceived in opposition to his cousin, T’Challa, through the racist trope of the “irrationally violent Black man.” Despite the radical historical context of the film’s title, neoliberal fantasies of the status quo remain uncomfort ably evident in the movie’s efforts to undercut Killmonger’s necessarily violent strategies for overthrowing violent apparatuses.

93

“They realize at last that change does not mean reform, that change does not mean improvement.”

Both narratives’ conclusions prop up the state as the only rational path to justice. The MCU demonizes the Flag Smashers for dis tributing food and vaccines to transnational refugees because of the method that pre cedes distribution: theft. But is it not theft, is it not violence, to hoard resources and keep them from the general public? It’s infinitely easier to denounce the violence embraced by radicals, but it’s not as easy to denounce the violence of a state that neglects the needs of its people. So, while the Global Repatriation

Council, the organization responsible for managing resources in a post-Blip world, pretends to care about refugees, the Flag Smashers go to any and all ends to not only provide displaced peoples with vital resources, but to undermine the very legiti macy of the GRC. But, of course, any threat to the reigning social order, as violent as it may be, is just one step too far.

94

Violent Methods

There exists a rule at the foundation of the liberal political project: any change brought through violent means is unequivocally bad. In fact, any violent resistance is bad. Nonviolent protest and incremental reform are the only acceptable ways to bring about improvement.

This betrays an incredibly naive view of what violence is. Sure, revolution will be violent. The colonizer, the capitalist, those who benefit from the regime of oppression, will not give up their position atop an unjust hierarchy without struggle.

But is it not violent for a man to starve while there is enough food for him to eat, because he can’t afford it? Is violence not committed against him when restaurants destroy food rather than allow him to eat it? Is it not violent for a woman to have to sleep under an overpass while millions of homes sit vacant? Is violence not committed against her when spikes are installed under the overpass to prevent her from sleeping there?

Reader, you’ve seen the violence committed by cops over and over again against people whose only crimes were holding up signs and marching. You know, intuitively at least, that

95
96
“Get this into your head: if violence were only a thing of the future, if exploitation and oppression never existed on earth, perhaps displays of nonviolence might relieve the conflict. But if the entire regime, even your nonviolent thoughts, is governed by a thousand-year-old oppression, your passiveness serves no other purpose but to put you on the side of the oppressors.”
— Jean-Paul Sartre, Preface to The Wretched of the Earth

those in power will not hesitate to use vio lence to stamp out any movement, no matter how nonviolent it may be, that might level the hierarchy they sit atop. Nonviolence does not beget nonviolence. It only teaches those in power that there are no consequences for the violence they subject us to.

Liberalism seems intent on refusing to recognize this fundamental truth about our society: that we have normalized, rendered invisible the violence against the poor, against minorities, against colonized people. That the structures we have built are far more violent than any anarchist or communist revolution could ever be. So, superhero media under liberalism can never show us true revolution, even if it purports to do so. It must be bastardized, perverted, a mockery of the ideals we hold dear. It must be pure, unadul terated violence itself, cloaked in aesthetics looted from the corpses of the liberation movements of the past and present.

Only after selling us this lie, that revolution ary violence is unacceptable but systemic violence is unavoidable, can superhero media justify the actions of its heroes. A movie like Black Panther can only sell the defeat of Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan), the movie’s representation of decolonial revolutionary move ments, as a happy ending by perpetuating the common colonialist myth that decolonial revolution isn’t liberatory, but instead seeks only to recreate the same hierarchical struc tures imposed by colonialism. Killmonger directly states this in the film, telling the Wakandans that “the world’s going to start over and this time we’re on top.”

Once superhero media establishes the narra tive that revolutionary violence is unjustified, it can sell us liberalism’s preferred alterna tive: reform.

The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, a Disney+ miniseries pitting the unquestionably good U.S. military, cynically represented through Sam (Anthony Mackie), a Black superhero, against the violent and dangerous anarchists, visually represented through the fabricated aesthetic of the Antifa boogeyman, demon strates this perfectly. In the finale, the leader of the anarchists (because if there’s one thing we all know about anarchists, it’s that they have leaders) takes direct action to prevent

97

the in-universe UN representative stand-ins from passing a resolution that would signifi cantly harm refugees, an action portrayed as unjustified. The show says the quiet part out loud: to liberals, the comfort of a few political elites is more valuable than the lives of countless marginalized people (this is the same value judgment displayed in the faux outrage over the Kyrsten Sinema bathroom protest incident).

Sam kills the anarchist leader after acknowl edging that her cause was just while con demning her violent methods. Then, in a 5-minute monologue straight out of Aaron Sorkin’s wet dreams, he asks the representatives to think about all of the people they’d be harming if they went forward with the resolution, so they don’t pass it! Happy ending achieved. The message here is clear: Violence doesn’t make change, nonviolence does! Those in power are not evil men, but disinterested gods who we must implore to do the right thing! They don’t harm people out of malice or lust for power, they do it because no one asked them nicely not to!

Sam talks about how these representatives “can knock down a forest with an email,” how they “can feed a million people with a phone call,” but rather than question why these individuals should have such terrify ing power, Sam can only beg them to think about the people they might impact.

Perhaps the most egregious example of this naturalization of the relationship of power and powerlessness between state and citizen can be seen in the cover art of the upcoming Superman: Son of Kal-El #7, a comic in which, as ScreenRant’s Liam McGuire

proudly exclaims, “Superman will fight climate change head-on.” By this, he means, of course, that Superman can be seen holding up a sign and protesting against climate change.

It’s very easy to “be” against climate change, the same way that it’s very easy to “be” against police brutality, but being against the effects of systems means nothing unless you’re against the systems themselves. Just as truly eliminating police brutality requires the abolition of the police, truly ending climate change requires dismantling capitalism, the system that values short-term private gain over long-term public well-being.

Fighting against these systems requires action, not just protests for visibility.

“Climate change” itself is amorphous, but fossil fuel infrastructure is tangible and can be sabotaged, and the people most responsible for causing climate change have names and addresses. If Superman really wanted to “fight climate change head-on,” maybe he could start there. 1

1

I would like to make it clear that I am only arguing about the use of revolutionary violence IN MEDIA. I am NOT, for example, saying that we are morally obligated to destroy fossil fuel infrastructure, because that would be illegal. I would NEVER recommend, for example, that people read Andreas Malm’s book How to Blow Up a Pipeline, because halting the extraction, flow, and consumption of fossil fuels is definitely not a necessary goal of any movement that seeks to save the planet from climate change.

98

Leveling with the Incredible Hulk

In 1986, Frank Miller released a four-part miniseries, entitled Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. Despite its astonishingly positive reviews, its implications as a fascist manifesto reach further than its supposed representation of a superhero as an idealized UberMensch or an “ideal, superior man of the future.”

The comic returns to the classic character of Batman as a new-and-improved, 55-yearold Bruce Wayne. Miller’s portrayal bears many similarities to the fascist icon of Hitler himself; blatant Nazi symbolism even appears in the artwork. Batman sees himself as a self-righteous Christ figure, sent to save the city from evil.

Batman’s goal is to eradicate Gotham’s resident gang, The Mutants, who appear to be a thinly veiled racist caricature of black people. Their threat to take over the city, and the helpless white people who inhabit it, is fought by Batman, on behalf of the (white) people of Gotham. This theme of dehumanizing the “other” appears in much of superhero media, where the heroes work against a crafty villain, alien invasion, or outsider gang, while the people rally behind their fascist savior.

So where do we go from here? How can superheroes turn the page on their own hypocrisy? Al Ewing’s The Immortal Hulk, originally published in 2018, shows prom ise for the future of superheroes. A vast improvement from its predecessors, the comic’s characters could function as actual proponents for change.

Ewing’s character Bruce Banner, who is known in his crime-fighting form as the

Hulk, is extremely forthright, broadcast ing his argument to the reader on several occasions. While most superheroes hope that the people they protect will blindly follow, Banner directly describes the problems of his society to the audience. Unlike Miller’s Batman, Banner doesn’t immediately assume the audience will follow him unconditionally. He hopes to not only educate the audience but to earn their support. He levels with us, treats us as equals.

Banner’s proposed action targets Roxxon, the story’s stand-in for Facebook, Fox News, and general capitalist evil. He explains that Roxxon causes nothing but harm, but “there’s still short-term profit to be made, so the same systems are allowed to continue. Over all our dead bodies, if need be.” Rather than proposing some petty reform to capitalism, Banner argues that it is unsustainable and must be torn down, and advocates for direct action against the corporations responsible for looting the planet and exploiting the working class: “But what if you were to target one of these... entities...and make them pay?”

Not only is the reader provided with a realworld problem, but they are provided with solutions and explanations for why those solutions will work. Bruce Banner, then, is a model for how superhero media can be positively implemented to inspire change. Rather than simply watching a superhero eradicate an outsider group, the reader is called to contemplate how and why Roxxon, and other institutions, should be dismantled.

The Immortal Hulk is a shining example of how effective change can, and will, occur outside of Miller’s fascist vacuum.

99
Writer Maeve Collins

“The first appeal of a fascist or prematurely fascist movement is an appeal against the intruders.”

100

APPLES

THE FERMENTED FRUITS:

: Ruby Berryman, Ellie Epperson, Bryanna Mendez

: Maya Horan

: Ellie Epperson

& COSTUME DESIGN: Ruby Berryman, Arielle Roybal, Sam Brady-Myerov

: Aliya Hollub, Emily Lappidus, Kate Kunitz

: Nora Goodale, Paola Santiago, Jess Piard, Mona Li, Charlie Shaw

: Annabel Gillespie

EVE'S ROTTING
DIRECTION
WRITING
EDITING
STYLING
PHOTOGRAPHY
MODELS
LAYOUT
104

The rind picked apart, a blue bowl full of pith. Sun glints off the ceramic.

The base nestled into soil, a circular imprint left behind.

Grass in toes intertwined, Arms kissing elbows, curled pink lips

A drop of spit at the bow.

We see our face in the membranous skin — peel it off with one long fingernail.

Whistling through tongue pressed rough to the palette, Pressed high to the back of the throat.

We are hungry.

Rotting in the sunshine, seven days overdue. We press on the pulp till it drips to the ground, Where underneath our red mouth lays waiting,

Wet like a cave, like mud, like a fish yet unnamed.

Wet like muscles, like tunnels, like sacrilege, We drink gurgles, fervid,

We drink as if it was never a choice.

105
108

2. there they find him at the ear of Eve, tempting her in a dream, and bring him, though unwilling, to Gabriel; by whom question’d, he scornfully answers, prepares resistance, but hinder’d by a Sign from Heaven, flies out of Paradise

109

We are the first woman, so we know what being a woman is like. It is full, full of fullness. Full of ripeness. Bloating. We are hair. Skin. Teeth. We see our reflection. We see it in the water, which is the perfect temperature, and entirely still. We see our smoothness, flat ness, in the solid still water. Who is that? we ask our selves. We are one broad bone, poking out from tough skin, making wounds, our cauterizing touch. We are thunder, the force of our dire arms. We are companions of our fall. Our bigness swarms and stifles and releases and screams and cries and laughs and tosses, retching, twisting, pushing, vomiting up sweet juice into the night. Wiping it from our chin. Crawling into bed. We sleep a drunk sleep. Saturnine and sluggish. We sleep heavy and dark. We smile, we dream, we writhe in the bedsheets. We go back to sleep.

We go. We go. We go. Unpunished.

114
AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL INQUIRY INTO THE RECENTLY UNEARTHED HUDSON RIVER LATE-ANCIENT LITHIC ARTIFACTUAL ARCHIVE: DIRECTION— Annabel Gillespie, WRITING— Maeve Collins PHOTOGRAPHY— Emily Lapidus, MODELS— Yasmin McLamb, LAYOUT— John TischkeRaf Rodriguez, Christophe Wassmer ILLUSTRATION— John TischkeErin Lee MAKEUP— Laney Ching Sophia Palitti, John Tischke ARTIFACTS, ARTISTS, & ANTHROPOLOGISTS:

Let’s take ourselves on a little journey—one thousand years into the past. We arrive in Manhattan, New York City. It’s the year 2003 CE. The Late-Ancient peoples of America flood the streets left and right, draped in archaic fashions and precious gadgets. The Americans hurry across the primitive city in mysterious underground tunnels, evidently built to protect citizens from the now-ex tinct, predatory Haliaeetus leucocephalus, commonly known as the Bald Eagle. The bygone ornithurae was worshipped throughout the first three centuries of the Late American Empire, as is evident through surviving sculpture and textiles.

New York City was a cultural, governmental, and business hub. American citizens flocked to the city to attend forums of all kinds, collectively referred to in Late-Ancient American texts as “the office.” As a highly populated section of the city, these forums were ubiquitous on the primeval island of Manhattan, drawing crowds from neighboring city-states such as New Jersey, modern-day Snookistan.1

117
STEP INTO MY TIME MACHINE...

1

As an inhabitant of Snookistan, in ancient times one may have travelled to Manhattan to meet with their soon-to-be ex-husband Bryce and his asshole lawyer.

118
119

Manhattan also proved to be a highly militaristic society, where civilians highly valued their soldiers. In such a pri mordial society, disputes within the country of America were settled through the unique American institution of physical combat. Each major city-state assembled its own army of burly men who would perform exhibitional battles, with eleven soldiers on each side. These exhibitions took place in colossal arenas, many ruins of which survive today. The state of New York held such military prowess that they held two full armies. These two armies were often in combat with one another, in the pursuit of glory and political power.

These battles served both as a method of peacekeeping, and as gambling entertainment for spectators.2 Through victories in such skirmishes, soldiers brought glory and money to the city they represented. Aligning with the ancient calendar, a large trophy would be awarded every so-called “February” to the most successful military to celebrate the imminent end of the winter season.

Deciphering a civilization as peculiar and intricate as Late-Ancient America requires high-level archaeological study. During the months of Decembruary and Julapril of 3069 CE, my talented team and I conducted an excava tion of the Manhattan ruins. In this report, I intend to detail the timeworn artifacts we so lovingly unearthed, as well as their uses and cultural significance.

PANINI

The first object we disentombed was a cooking device: a long, pincer-like apparatus, constructed of plastic and metal. Colorful plastic constitutes the handle of the device, encasing the interlocking metal plates on the “business end” of the apparatus to protect the user from high temperatures and injury. The appliance predates wireless electrical flow. To operate such a device required connecting the two metal prongs (connected to the corded tail) with a primitive electricity source, such as energy repositories housed along the walls of most 20th and 21st century buildings. This electrical current would allow the two corrugated metal plates to heat up, functioning as a cooking surface.

The item was intended for the ceremonial Late-Ancient American delicacy of the “sandwich,” composed of two slices of simple bread, enclosing various fillings, and heated with the help of said gadget.3 Late-Ancient American marketplaces usually sold only the compo nents necessary to make a meal on one’s own, meaning much of the community’s cooking took place in the home. The contemporary norm of community dining was not an idea proposed until the 28th century.

An ancient woman might have won a wager against her dickwad husband, for instance.

The scorned wife of a cheating husband may have found another use for the artifact.

120
THE
CRIMPER
2 3

TWEEZER

WACKERS

The next artifact was discovered wedged into the crevice of an ancient concrete walkway. Before the infrastructural revolutions of the 26th and 27th centuries, the lofted, glass walkways that now monopolize our skylines once existed as concrete “sidewalks,” running alongside inflexible (and frankly impractical) asphalt roads. These archaic roads were used for “cars,” or four-wheeled transportation contraptions, which required direct physical contact with the ground. While modern glass walkways allow for increased plant biodiversity at the ground level, concrete “sidewalks” would interrupt the natural growth of native species of poaceae, or grass.

In order to maintain the strict border between plant growth and concrete slab outside of one’s primitive dwelling, Late-Ancient Americans would trim the blades of grass using this metal utensil. The pincer-like tool can be held between the thumb and the forefinger, to pinch the blades of grass and snap them off at the appropriate lengths. A somewhat mysterious and tedious practice, this task is believed to hold religious significance. Archaeologists believe it may have been linked with the ritual of regularized placement of thin paper squares into metal compartments placed 10–20 feet outside of Late-Ancient dwelling places. Little is known about the practical func tion of these thin paper squares, but they held enough religious significance that the Late-Ancient Americans would have collected them early in the day, even before assuming their ritualistic garb each morning.

121
WEED

OVERSIZE EAR PLUGS

Round, pink, and squishy, a set of matching ear plugs was discovered floating on the edge of the Hudson River. Such a tool was commonplace in Late-Ancient America. The set was promptly scooped up and dissected. As previously discussed, the predatory bald eagle was ubiquitous in New York City at the time, and was worshipped greatly by civilians. In addition to being very dangerous, the now-extinct aviator was also thunderously loud, screeching day in and day out. With the high population of these ferocious birds, the din was at times unbearable to the Late-Ancient peoples. As a result, these earplugs were employed to block out these screeches. Due to the Late-Ancient Americans’ warped perceptions of their own bodies, the earplugs are wildly oversized. Their subpar estimation skills and lack of modern technology hindered the quality of these items.

BRONZE DYE

Late-Ancient Americans used temporary pigments and dyes for most of their clothing, which was each time lost in the process of washing. It was then reapplied with each wear. Our team was able to uncover a sample of this dye in the ruins of a Late-Ancient dwelling and recreated the use of this dye for demonstrative purposes, as illustrated below. Although it was a fashion item, the dye was also functional as a status symbol. The more disposable income one had, the more dye they could afford to use each time they wore their clothing. As a result, those of greater affluence would don clothing with increasingly saturated color. An outfit with a dark enough hue would have granted access into exclusive, high-status events.

123

BOULDERING AIDS

Our next site of excavation held much grimmer findings. Our team stumbled upon a one-thousand-year-old skeleton, likely the victim of a freak accident, preserved perfectly by the shifting sands of time. After fully unearthing and carbon-dat ing the remains, we concluded that this person likely died around the year 2004 AD. The cause of death was unclear, but trace amounts of Musa acuminata, or banana fibers, were detected near the left foot of the skeleton. However, this is not where the curiosities end. We were able to recover all ten distal phalanges, which are the bones located in the very tips of one’s fingers. Astonishingly enough, ten more small objects were located, completely intact, one for each finger.

Through our exploration, the team and I brought into public knowledge the best-preserved full set of Late-Ancient American climbing aids in the world. Now on display in the Mexinadian Museum of Natural History, these rectangular chunks of acrylic glass were used by primitive Americans in the scaling of large rocks, buildings, and vertical walls. While they were temporary, the artifacts would have been attached individually to the ten fingers and ten toes of the wearer, directly onto the natural fingernail. This would likely have been accomplished through the use of a chemical adhesive. My research proves that this fixative was likely a product similar to the later excavated “Cheez-Whiz.” The acrylic glass was incredibly strong, and often pointed, allowing for a much stronger grip on a vertical rock face, or for climbing up a building’s wall and into an open window. Despite the tool’s undeniable innovation, observers such as you or I may still wonder, how did they never think to use a rope?4 Research continues on these nebulous artifacts.

HAMSTER FLOTATION DEVICE

As is evident through the study of artifacts from the time period in question, spiritual and religious rituals held great importance to Late-Ancient Americans. Naturally, our team felt it imperative to spend time at the site of the largest religious temple, the Manhattan Mall. While this particular dig contained a treasure trove of religious mementos, the artifact pictured remained in the best condition. A foam-resin vessel adorned with decorative craters, this object is entirely buoyant (a characteristic instrumental to its use).

A sneaky husband figures that one out almost immediately!

This savage, cruel death for the innocent animal seems more fit for a mass murderer or a liar. Or even an infidelitous cheater and his homewrecking secretary.

The vessel was crafted in precise shape and size to house a small rodent. Most commonly, it held hamsters, a species that has now gone extinct. In the bizarre and barbaric religious practices of the era, a hamster or similar rodent would be placed into the vessel and set out to sea, as a form of ritual sacrifice. These sacrifices were a way to ask the gods for good fortune and were usually performed at the culmination of wedding ceremonies or similar celebratory rituals. The hamster or small rodent was left to its own devices, floating along in the sea until it was eaten or starved.5

4 5

ON THE PAST...

It should go without saying, archaeological research such as mine is instrumental in decoding the past. The mysterious, sometimes barbaric way of life employed by the Late-Ancient Americans may be indecipherable had these artifacts remained concealed under millennia of dust and grime. How could we begin to understand the daily lives of our ancestors without these heirlooms?

For this reason, I am proud to be an archaeologist, and am honored to receive praise from my peers for thorough and accurate work. I would be remiss not to mention that this vocation is taxing. Its repercussions course through every aspect of my life, including my relationships.6 Though it is not easy, I am humbled by the perennially perplexing mystery of the past.

Even the money and fame wasn't enough to keep you away from her, was it Bryce?

125
6

WOH TO B E AN

ICON

Icons fortified by the media pass through a perpetual cycle of idolization and iconoclasm. Just as quickly as we fall in love with them, they fall from their anointed pedestals. Such ritual investment in precarity and inconsistency illuminates a key truth: we must instead turn inward. How do we make icons of our own selves?

We asked three of our own Armour creatives to explore their definitions of what an icon is and how they embrace that definition within themselves.

THE ICONS AMONG US:

DIRECTION: Shaelee Comettant, Ben Levine, Nisha Mani, Dylan Stein

WRITING: Nisha Mani, Alyena Gilani, Meyme Nakash

EDITING: Grace Gore

PHOTOGRAPHY: Ben Levine, Alex McLaughlin

MODELS: Nisha Mani, Alyena Gilani, Meyme Nakash

LAYOUT: Annabel Gillespie

ICONIZE RUOYFLES

NISHA MANI

HOW TO BE AN ICON 129

What qualities do you look for in the icons you admire?

I am reluctant to designate anyone as an icon because the act of iconization seems almost dehumanizing. However, there are certain charac teristics people possess that I find to be worthy of the designation. Most significantly, the ability to complement freely, admire excessively and love endlessly. People with this ability understand that love comes in unlimited supply. The more you pour into others the more you fill yourself. It’s a concept that seems so obvious on the surface, but I often find myself falling into the trap of viewing love as a rare commodity: something to be hoarded, doled out in miserly quantities, and fought over.

What parts of yourself do you iconize?

I believe that we are all fundamentally one life force or God or loving energy. As Eben Alexander puts it in his book Living in a Mindful Universe, we are “individual souls participating in this shared journey of discovery.” While I live this life, the part of my being I iconize is my ability to create and contribute something new to this world. Everything we create is shaped by our unique fingerprint. If we assume each life has a purpose for existence, then it’s through creating art, science, music, and anything else we please that we leave our impact on this world.

As beings who are always changing, growing, and adapting, how do you continue to highlight these “iconic” parts of yourself?

To answer this question we need to take a closer look at how we define ourselves and our reality. Metaphysical idealism is the theory most closely aligned with my present understanding of reality. Idealism is the idea that the world is simply a reflec tion of our perception and that we create our reality; our reality includes the “I” we view as ourselves. The parts of ourselves that change and grow tend to be things like our personality, our abilities, and our knowledge. However, the things I iconize about myself —my ability to love freely and create hon estly — stem from the part of myself that remains constant. Thus, my goal is to loosen my attachment to the parts of myself I perceive in an attempt to more closely align with the “I” that just is.

What is the biggest barrier to viewing yourself as an icon?

I often conflate iconization with objectification because of the way popular “icons” are presented in the media. Present and historical icons are often created by breaking down a person into bite-sized characteristics that can be easily admired and digested— they are closer to an idea than a person. So, how do we iconize ourselves without over-emphasizing one element of ourselves that is bound to change as we grow? How do we perpetuate self-love that doesn’t die? I think the answer lies in embracing the part of ourselves that drives personal evolution; the one that isn’t content and is con stantly seeking to give more, learn more, create more. Hopefully, if we continue to admire and nurture that seeking aspect in ourselves, it will lead us to a place of greater truth and deeper fulfillment.

130

What, to you, is an icon?

An icon is somebody that is uniquely everlasting; they are immortal in the eyes of others.

What qualities do you look for in the icons you admire?

I look up to my icons because they are people who I aspire to be like. I seek to emulate my icons, whether it be channeling Zendaya’s chic style or contemplating dropping out of college like Steve Jobs. Though, as I am introduced to new icons, I find myself manipulating certain aspects of my life in order to better fit what I think makes them ideal.

What is the biggest barrier to viewing yourself as an icon?

Society has centered and celebrated contemporary icons in such a way that comparison is inescapable. For me, comparison feels like a sinking in my chest. It’s the feeling that I will never be good enough. What I fail to realize—or rather, fail to accept—is that my icons are actually just strangers to me. I only know what they want me to know. Iconizing somebody should not mean idealizing them. People often synonymize the two.

What parts of yourself do you iconize?

I am working on iconizing myself as much as I do others. On this path, I’ve discovered the things I truly want to change, and things I never want to change. Rather than forcing myself into a mold that doesn’t fit, I want to embrace my quirks. I’m learning to embrace my impatience and shy demeanor, my bookish personality, and a borderline unhealthy obsession with chocolate. I iconize the parts of myself that are imperfect: my crooked pinkies, stubby toes, short height, and frizzy hair.

I iconize my quirky sense of style and slightly lazy work ethic. It may seem cliche, but as I tackle my first semester of college, I’m learning how to be gen uinely happy rather than trying to be somebody else.

131

ALYENA GILANI

HOW TO BE AN ICON 132

What qualities do you look for in the icons you admire?

The icons I admire most are the unapologetic ones. The ones who are unafraid of shedding past versions of themselves, even if it means starting at ground zero. They are the most self-confident because they understand that to be “human” is a project under constant change and development. They don’t apologize for who they are because their self-image is for themselves, and themselves only.

What parts of yourself do you iconize?

A part of myself that I iconize is my adaptability. I’m an ever-changing person in an ever-changing world, but my ability to adapt to different environ ments and situations has allowed me to channel the best parts of myself, especially in the face of hardship. Not to mention that my style is never the same across different days of the week.

As beings who are always changing, growing, and adapting, how do you continue to highlight these iconic parts of yourself?

For me, life is like a game of cards. I may not have control over the hand I’m dealt, but it’s in my hands how I play. I know I’m doing things right when I falter and pick myself back up again, becoming the best version of myself by learning from my mistakes and others.

What is the biggest barrier to viewing yourself as an icon?

I don’t concern myself with whether or not I’m an icon because I’m uninterested in reducing myself to a single image or set of traits. Humans are complex beings. There’s no reader’s digest version of Meyme Nakash, or anyone for that matter.

MORF HT E CREATIVE DIRECT O SR133

MEYME NAKASH

As we discuss the destruction of icons, it’s just as important to understand their constructions—how they are built up by the media, designed by rhetoric, and fabricated by our perceptions. When initially asking the question “how does one become an icon?” we realized there is no one answer. The discovery of an inner-icon is both distinct and intimate. It is also a fluid process: changing, adapting, and growing with us. We perpetually construct and deconstruct the images of ourselves that we may have uplifted at one point in our lives. How, then, do we continue loving ourselves if we are ever-changing? With that love, how do we continue acknowledging the parts of ourselves

that we want to change? It all comes down to a process of discovering, and rediscovering, new parts of yourself. It’s in finding crevices of your personality that you forgot were there, laughing at a newly developed sense of humor, letting yourself be surprised by the power of your own voice.

Pretend you are meeting yourself for the first time. See yourself through fresh, unfiltered eyes. Return to your own depths by asking yourself questions: “What lights your fire?” “What is your favorite memory?” “What are your regrets?” “What makes you an icon?”

HOW TO BE AN ICON 134

contributors & staff

Reni Akande

Katie Asness

Rayna Auerbach

Olivia Baba

Elizabeth Barrick Alaina Baumohl

Nina Bergman

Ruby Berryman

Sam Brady-Myerov

Juliana Bush

SaMiya Carroll

Laney Ching Aaron Cho

Elaine Choy Maeve Collins

Shaelee Comettant

Violet Cooper Brooke Cowan Maggie Croghan Roberta Cueva Grace Demba

Sophie Difazio

Sophia Dykstra

Audrey Engman

Ellie Epperson

Annie Ferdman

Lu Folsey

Alyena Gilani

Alyena Gilani

Cara Gillow

Sydney Goldstein

Jessie Goodwin

Lily Gordon Grace Gore

Ruby Grant Soreal Gray

Sofía Gutiérrez Madison Hunt Avital Isakov Isabelle Jefferis Abby Jones Lily Kapner Jasmine Kim Jay Kim Olivia King Paul Kuemmel Kate Kunitz

Anu Lakkamsani Emily Lapidus Erin Lee Ben Levine Mona Li Dear Liu Mei (Maggie) Liu

Claire Magnuson

Michaela (Mikki) Marcille

Sophia Marlin Alexia McCullison Ray McIntyre

Yasmin Mclamb Alex McLaughlin Ali Meltzer

Bryanna Mendez Neil Narayanan Jerome Nashed Christina Oates Sophia Palitti

Patricia Parerab

Vraj Patel Faith Phillips Helen Piloto Lucia Pirone Jessica Price Celia Rattner

Sara Rizzoli Raf Rodriguez Morgan Rogers Eva Romanoff Arielle Roybal Kyra Ruben Paola Santiago William Satloff

Maddie Savitch

Sophi Seley Brooke Simpson

Nirali Somia

Sidney Speicher

Lily Spiniolas Akiva Stadlan Emma Stout

Becca Tarter

Stella Thomas Thuy Tran Lilly Vereen

Cynthia Viets

Ellie Wagner

Brook Wang Kellen Wang Sarah Wang Cayson Wernick

Ulrica Wu

Jackie Yoon

Gracie Zhang Josie Zimmerman

Haley Harris / Logan Krohn Sophie Goldstein / Nisha Mani / Annabel Gillespie / John Tischke / Sophie Ross / Andrea Zhou / Leena Bekhiet / Coco Yuan / Lea Bond / Alberto Buzali / Ruby Berryman / Kaitlyn Stansbury / Celia Gerber / Aliya Hollub / Kennedy Morganfield / Meyme Nakash / Dylan Stein / Audrey Engman / Isabelle Jefferis / Lu Gillespie / Ella Dassin / Ava Farrar / Lambo Perkins / Ali Meltzer / Josie Zimmerman

Jessie Goodwin / Michaela "Mikki" Marcille / Sophi Seley / Grace Gore / Ellie Epperson / Paola Santiago / Maya Horan / Reni Akande / Elizabeth Barrick / Maeve Collins / Alyena Gileni / Sarah Wang / Sydney Goldstein / Mona Li / Jess Piard / Yabsera Bekele / Marc Ridgell / Faith Phillips / Erin Lee / Annie Feldman / Bo Schmidt / Yasmin McLamb / Nora Goodale / Claire Magnuson / Nick Massenburg / Madison Fang / Ben Levine / Dear Liu / Maddie Savitch / Bryanna Mendez / Morgan Rogers / Aliya Hollub / Alex McLaughlin / Lily Kapner / Grace Demba / Helen Piloto / Lily Vereen / Iggy Xie / Felix Moreno / Avery Johnson / Ali Meltzer / Charlie Shaw / Arielle Roybal / Sam Brady-Myerov / Raf Rodriguez / Christoph Wassemer / Emily Lapidus / Kate Kunitz / Laney Ching / Shaelee Comettant

Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.