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Show overview

Bungacast has been publishing since 2020, and across the 6 years since has built a catalogue of 414 episodes, alongside 14 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 300 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 11 min and 1h 10m — with run-times ranging widely across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language News show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 30 episodes already out so far this year.

Episodes
414
Running
2020–2026 · 6y
Median length
46 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

The global politics podcast at the end of the End of History. Politics is back but it’s stranger than ever: join us as we chart a course beyond the age of ’bunga bunga’. Interviews, long-form discussions, docu-series.

Latest Episodes

View all 414 episodes

UNLOCKED: /551/ Reading Club: Mythologies ft. Catherine Liu

Jun 23, 20261h 30m

/554/ Capitalism Is When the State... ft. Corey Robin

Jun 16, 20261h 14m

/553/ Energy Sovereignty = Political Independence? ft. Benjamin Bradlow

Jun 9, 202641 min

/552/ Bunga Live: Is History Back (Baby)?

Jun 1, 20262h 15m

/551/ Reading Club: Mythologies ft. Catherine Liu

May 26, 202631 min

/550/ The New Dollar Imperialism ft. Costas Lapavitsas

May 19, 20261h 14m

History’s back, baby! (Event in London)

May 15, 20261 min

/549/ Why Has Politics Genderised? ft. Ashley Frawley

May 12, 202632 min

/548/ Post-Legitimate Society ft. Will Charles

May 5, 202636 min

/547/ What Are the Politics of Stagnation? ft. Dylan Riley

Apr 28, 20261h 20m

/546/ Reading Club: Are We All Post-Liberal Now? ft. Geoff Shullenberger

Apr 21, 202638 min

/545/ Orbanism without Orban: the New European Centre? ft. Szilard Pap

Apr 15, 202651 min

/544/ Iran War: Rogue State USA ft. Arash Azizi

Apr 14, 20261h 25m

/543/ Squeamish About Sex, Aroused By Identity ft. Ran Heilbrunn

Apr 7, 202630 min

Ep 557/542/ Letters to the Editors: March 2026

We deal with your questions, comments and criticisms from the past month. Key issues: The difference between radical conservatism and the far right Racism in class society in decomposition Tech bro übermenschen (or just Uber men) Who is doing the work of justifying this order? And Ursula, the villainous Cecaelian sea witch, about whom songs must be sung For the full episode, subscribe at patreon.com/bungacast Links: To Keep and Bear Arms, Garry Wills, The New York Review David Graeber vs. Peter Thiel: Where Did the Future Go? /495/ Heritage America vs the World? ft. James Pogue

Mar 31, 202629 min

Ep 556/541/ Wedging in a Lever ft. Benjamin Fong

On Amazon, labour & logistics, and trains. Benjamin Fong, of ASU's Center for Work and Democracy, as well as an editor at Damage and co-author of the substack On The Seams, talks to Alex and George about organising workers in locations of corporate vulnerability. We also preview the forthcoming print issue of Damage, Trains, by discussing modernity and its avatars, and development and de-development in Brazil. Why target Amazon above all else? What are the "seams" and why are they important? Can labour still "go after the big targets"? Do these still exist given the dispersion of production and distribution? How much public appetite is there for blockages at pain points? Links: On the Seams, Substack The Labor Movement Must Go All In on Organizing Amazon, Benjamin Y Fong, Jacobin Organizing Logistics Chokepoints: Hitting Them Where It Hurts, Benjamin Y Fong, New Labor Forum The Apotheosis of Point of Sale Data, Benjamin Y Fong, Phenomenal World

Mar 24, 20261h 8m

Ep 555/540/ Welcome to the Apolar and Post-Multilateral World ft. Tom Chodor

On "non-hegemony" and world disorder. Tom Chodor, IR & politics scholar at Monash University, joins us to talk about a world that still retains the formal shells of multilateral institutions but whose contents have been hollowed out. What is "multilateralism"? Why is it an important concept to capture the US-led order that is now falling apart? If multilateralism was always in crisis, what is new today? Is the emerging (dis)order multipolar or apolar? What's the difference? Is multilateralism the historic exception that we wrongly take to be the norm? Why is there no going back to the post-1945 – or post-1991 – order? What are the prospects for a new hegemonic order? Isn’t prolonged chaos and decay more likely? The full episode is for subscribers. Join at patreon.com/bungacast Links: Non-Hegemony, Tom Chodor, Jack Taggart and Ilias Alami, Phenomenal World /377/ The Locked-Up Country ft. Shahar Hameiri & Tom Chodor /357/ Lucky, Meaty Nations ft. Shahar Hameiri & Tom Chodor

Mar 17, 202641 min

Ep 554/539/ Reading Club: Where's Our Flying Cars?

On the slowing rate of technological progress. Alex, George and contributing editor (and science writer) Leigh Phillips discuss David Graeber's 2012 essay, Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit. This builds on two of this year's themes: state capitalism (how planning and growth – or their absence – intersect with technology) and the pre-political (how technology shapes •⁠ ⁠Were we right to expect jetpacks? And are we looking in the right place for technological advances today? •⁠ ⁠⁠Has technical progress actually slowed in the way Graeber says? •⁠ ⁠⁠Are the explanations he gives for slowdown correct? •⁠ ⁠⁠What political tasks does this reality impose on us? •⁠ ⁠⁠What is the role of geopolitics and war in the rate of technological development? Links: Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit, David Graeber, The Baffler Science Is Getting Less Bang for Its Buck, Patrick Collison & Michael Nielsen, The Atlantic /59/ Übermenschen of Capital Pt. 3 ft. Leigh Phillips & Michal Rozworski Progress is in the balance between innovation and implementation, Phil Bell, LSE Global Economic History: A Very Short Introduction (On Robert C. Allen) Engels’s Second Theory: Technology, Warfare and the Growth of the State

Mar 13, 202628 min

Ep 553/538/ Muskism ft. Quinn Slobodian & Ben Tarnoff

On the operating system of the 21st century. Historian Quinn Slobodian and tech writer Ben Tarnoff talk to Alex Hochuli and Alex Gourevitch about their new book, Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed, and why we should ask "what is Musk a symptom of?" If Fordism characterised the mid-20th century, are our times those of Muskism? What are the touchstones of Muskism that the authors identify: fortress futurism, financial fabulism, state symbiosis? Who is the real Musk, that of vehicles, energy, infrastructure, or that of the post-industrial stuff of social media, finance, AI? What does Muskism promise people? How does it legitimise itself – if at all? Is the state actually dependent on Musk, or is Musk dependent on the state? How much of Musk's right-wing turn is necessary to Muskism, and how much is contingent? Is the racial component central? Links: Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed, Quinn Slobodian & Ben Tarnoff, Harper Collins /57/ Übermenschen of Capital Pt. 1 ft. Alex Gourevitch

Mar 10, 20261h 15m

Ep 552/537/ Letters to the Editors: Feb 2026

We deal with your questions, comments and criticisms from the past month or so. Key issues this month are: What are the wrongs of the postmodern right – aand left? Will the civilisational paradigm become hegemonic? Is Trump's foreign policy techno-populist? Whether, and how, to protest anti-immigration policing To defend or to smash the professions? For the full episode, subscribe at patreon.com/bungacast

Feb 27, 202631 min
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