It’s been the opposite of what you might call a banner year for legacy media. Public faith in our papers of record continues to erode. The monoculture’s in shambles, and you can’t swing an inbox open without hitting a dozen Substacks. This isn’t an obvious time to kick off a new arts and culture magazine. Yet the fine folks at Equator have done just that.

Billed as a new magazine of politics, culture, and art, Equator has already drawn some thrilling international voices to the masthead. Early contributions merge political theory and literary criticism. In a recent essay, public intellectual Naomi Klein considered surrealism as an anti-fascist practice. And Hisham Matar [looked at a history…

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