Publisher's Message

By Phong H. Bui

April is poetry month, and as we celebrate it we surely miss how former President John F. Kennedy offered such beautiful words in his 1963 eulogy for Robert Frost at Amherst College: “When power narrows the areas of man’s concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of his existence.”

By Phong H. Bui

The ethos of tolerance and diversity has been a driving force not only behind the emergence of the United States of America as a moral exemplar, but also an important element of its economic prosperity. The end of such tolerance would severely damage the moral esteem with which the United States has long been regarded. Immigrants and refugees should not be used as political pawns, as we’ve experienced with unrelenting aggression under the Trump administration. To do so is in fact un-American.

By Phong H. Bui

As our world has become increasingly more mechanized by technological speed and its inherent coldness, we can easily be subjected to behavior in response to algorithms, and so we urgently need to consider the essential differences between freedom being negative and positive.

By Phong H. Bui

As we think of our journey toward this historic milestone, let us take this time as an opportunity to pause and reflect on our nation’s past, honor the contributions of all Americans, and look ahead toward the future we want to create for the next generation and beyond.

By Phong H. Bui

Though we know that every human idea that ever came into existence is open to various interpretations, and vulnerable to distortions that could lead to endless unexpected perverse consequences, we also know that as long as we can hold the space that lies in-between for ourselves, our worldviews and our observations of human behavior can be explored endlessly and lead to broader thinking.

By Phong H. Bui

As we celebrate our twenty-five-year anniversary of the Rail this month, I’ve come to recognize it as a new social environment—not a conventional printed matter or a magazine created for artists, but rather a living organism, filled with inspiring expressions of artists and other creatives for our various communities

By Phong H. Bui

As we come to terms with our current geopolitical crisis, we have little or no choice but to either surrender to or resist the coexistence of globalism and nationalism, knowing that while the former embraces interconnectedness and global partnership, the latter insists on national interest and national identity.

By Phong H. Bui

Now may be a good time for us to reassess where we have been, and how we got where we now are in this weird and wonderful place called America: a place that we have always called free and open, but where the back-and-forth swings of our social and political pendulums are more extreme than anywhere else on earth.

By Phong H. Bui

Having recently read Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter again, I began to think about how young America is. It only began with the Pilgrims and the Puritans who migrated from England to North America, primarily New England, during the first Great Migration between 1620 and 1640. And the formal creation of the United States of America came only after the Declaration of Independence in 1776, less than 250 years ago.

By Phong H. Bui

On a rainy morning, sometime in May of 1851, Herman Melville wrote a long letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne with an apologetic yet remarkable excuse for his failure to visit his friend as he had promised for quite some time. It was in this very letter that he described his “ruthless democracy,” implying what had prevented him to take his “pine-board chariot” from his home in Pittsfield to Hawthorne’s home in Concord, Massachusetts—the distance between the two locations could have required days by horse then, though it would take only two and a half hours by car today.

By Phong H. Bui

In his 2016 best-selling memoir Hillbilly Elegy, JD Vance proudly shared how he went from being a Marine to attending college on the GI Bill at Ohio State University, then went on to Yale Law School, and asserted how it was education that lifted him out of poverty. By 2021, however, during a speech titled “The Universities are the Enemy” at the National Conservatism Conference, Vance said, “We have to honestly and aggressively attack the universities in this country.”

By Phong H. Bui

We must once again be as inventive, resilient, and courageous as urgently needed in mediating the following impending issues—what Philip Roth refers to as “The indigenous American berserk,” by which he meant America is a nation of extreme contradictions, capable both of losing its mojo by self-effacing identity and of demonstrating its own arrogance and narcissism.

By Phong H. Bui

How can we forget the 2016 election of Donald J. Trump, Brexit, the rise of populism in the West, while in the East China’s fierce ambition altered the global balance of power? As we now come to acknowledge that we had taken liberal democracy for granted in the last few decades, we have to remind ourselves how its miracle is also its fragility.

By Phong H. Bui

At the Rail, we have just celebrated our twenty-fourth anniversary in October by launching a brand new and dynamic website, through which we want to deploy the imminent slowness and warmth of our made thoughts, made objects, among other acts of creation, as counter-frictions against technology’s speed and algorithmic coldness.

By Phong H. Bui

This issue is dedicated in loving memory of our friends Alicia Henry (1966–2024), Richard Mayhew (1924–2024), Robert C. Morgan (1947–2024), and Lillian Schwartz (1927–2024), all of whom have significantly contributed to our visual culture in their respective works of art, teaching, and writing.

By Phong H. Bui

This issue is dedicated to the remarkable lives and works of our mentors and friends, David Anfam (1955–2024), Rebecca Horn (1944–2024), Fredric Jameson (1934–2024), Steve Silberman (1957–2024), and Jacqueline Winsor (1941–2024), all of whom our critical culture is indebted to, in their fearless, inventive, and agile thinking.

By Phong H. Bui

We human beings, who inhabit seven continents across the world, stretching across Asia, Europe, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, and Australia, with a total population of 8.2 billion, have always to some extent have accepted the fact that accidents, also known as asymmetrical occurrences, are abundant and real.

By Phong H. Bui
We must remind ourselves that the speed of technology and social media can be deployed for both negative and positive means of communication. And in response, we must continue to elevate and give proper attention to the slowness of culture, the arts, and the humanities as urgent and vital counter friction as we’ve done so in the past—for they are essential to the health of our democratic heart and all of us as individuals.
By Phong H. Bui
In their works, artists create fertile grounds in which human freedom can thrive, rooted always in the individual rather than in institutions, churches, or national states. While each artist may undertake their journey differently in relation to their awareness of Plato’s chariot allegory and Nietzsche’s metamorphoses of the spirit—they, as their own masters, are driven to make their work from inner necessity, a condition that embraces both feeling and thought, held together by the embracing unity of freedom.
By Phong H. Bui
As our internal conflicts are escalating at home, with the left and the right bending their own twigs on endless frictions, and pushing their ideologies as if to see how far they can go before the twig breaks and or bends and springs back, whipping their own faces, wars and violence continue to intensify abroad.
By Phong H. Bui
Freedom of expression has never flourished under any authoritarian regime, for censorship is the most effective tool to keep any dictator in power.
By Phong H. Bui
Freedom is often defined in a kind of Machiavellian sense by people who claim a certain nobility of spirit but in fact are driven by vile calculation. As a result, we often find ourselves accepting an idea of freedom which, in the context of democracy in America, has altogether different meanings than elsewhere in the world.
By Phong H. Bui
Though the advent of social media has created a brilliant democratic openness, those same social media also carry a lot of destructive tendencies. Many of us remember that we once received thoughtful letters from people who agreed or disagreed with what we may have voiced in an essay, an exhibition, or a lecture; and we knew that those complimentary or dissenting responses each required a certain amount of time to compose.
By Phong H. Bui
Of all tyrannies, a tyranny that is driven by a sincere belief that it is acting for the good of its intended casualty may turn out to be the most oppressive, partly because it allows us to act in a way that meets with the approval of our conscience.
By Phong H. Bui
We like to think of culture as providing a balancing and healing element for the human condition. And the present political circumstances all over the world make us all the more aware of how important such balance is—how important it is for us to act in harmony with, and with consideration for, each other.
By Phong H. Bui
As we think and re-think who we are as individuals, capable of integrating our inner and outer lives, we should question how we are related to the world’s economic machine, especially in relation to our constant consumption of things, and how we as individuals relate to economic forces that we are part of and at the same time try to maintain a certain distance from.
By Phong H. Bui
At home, former president Donald J. Trump is facing multiple criminal cases for his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election in the run-up to the violent riot by his supporters at the US Capitol, in an unprecedented effort to block the peaceful transfer of presidential power, posing a great threat to American democracy.
By Phong H. Bui
The recent news of Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner forces (a mercenary army that had played an outsized role in the fighting in Ukraine) accusing Russia’s military leadership of attacking and killing his own soldiers has raised eyebrows all over the world. Especially when Prigozhin commanded his forces to return to their bases, and then to begin making their way toward Moscow.
By Phong H. Bui
Many of us have come to identify Trumpian America as a kind of mirror image of Jacksonian America of the 1830s. They both, for example, shared a common distrust of any form of expertise, aggressively insisting instead that all important functions are simple enough to be performed by any ordinary citizen. And above all, they both had a strong desire to overthrow whatever they thought represented the establishment. We’ve come to realize, I think, that large parts of the population harbor nativist prejudices, which are surprisingly easy to make come to the surface.
By Phong H. Bui
In Isaiah Berlin’s famous essay “Two Concepts of Liberty,” he sets out his two conditions of negative and positive liberty. In short, negative liberty involves freedom from as a response to the question “what is the area within which the subject—a person or group of persons—is or should be left to do or be what he is able to do or be, without interference by other persons?”
By Phong H. Bui
Many of us ponder at times whether the “I” and the “Me” are equal parts of one unified organism that constitutes the “self.” While it’s true that we all can assume the “self” is a social process or an ongoing work-in-progress, we’re also aware of the magnitude when the “I”, which claims a certain position or privilege in society, outweighs the “Me” who is receptive and sympathetic to our constant social and political frictions. If we take the analogy of “what comes first, the chicken or the egg?”
By Phong H. Bui
Many of us may still remember how the great Athenian statesman Pericles proposed to melt the gold from the statue of Athena, patron goddess of the city, when the war against Sparta was exhausting all of Athens’s funds. Which leads us to think about how a symbol can elicit such strong emotional responses from the nation’s citizens when it is at the risk of being desecrated.

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