#63 Jan-Feb 2026 Follow the Money

The Funambulist 63 Vignette
The Funambulist 63 Sample 01 The Funambulist 63 Sample 02 The Funambulist 63 Sample 03 The Funambulist 63 Sample 04 The Funambulist 63 Sample 05 The Funambulist 63 Sample 06 The Funambulist 63 Sample 07 The Funambulist 63 Sample 08 The Funambulist 63 Sample 09 The Funambulist 63 Sample 10 The Funambulist 63 Sample 11 The Funambulist 63 Sample 12 The Funambulist 63 Sample 13 The Funambulist 63 Sample 14 The Funambulist 63 Sample 15 The Funambulist 63 Sample 16 The Funambulist 63 Sample 17 The Funambulist 63 Sample 18

If you like our content, you can save on your future orders by subscribing to The Funambulist (print + digital or digital only; monthly or annually).

For this 63rd issue of The Funambulist, we teamed-up with Tunisian anthropologist and visual artist Myriam Amri and invite you to Follow the Money with us. In it, we enter the crevices of a capitalist system and trace it back to its central nodes: property, land, capital, and class. We read how money is central to colonial and imperial projects, but also how sovereignty and the liberation of our monetary imaginary can be tools of emancipation. From the CFA franc (Ndongo Samba Sylla, Moses März) to the US dollar (Lily H. Chumley) or the Palestinian Pound (Hicham Safieddine), we navigate monetary politics around the world, and more specifically in Sudan (Nisrin Elamin & Laleh Khalili), Puerto Rico (Roque Salas Rivera) or Brazil (Cho). The issue also contains a board game entitled “You’ve Got Yourselves a Revolution, Now What?” imagined by the issue editors Myriam Amri and Léopold Lambert and designed by Aude Abou Nasr. As for the cover, it features an artwork by Adriana Martínez Barón.

You can also read Myriam Amri’s full introduction to the issue here.

In the News from the Fronts section, you can read three texts about the legacy of Italian colonialism in southern Somalia (Iman Mohamed), the denationalization of 50,000 Afropanamanians in the 1940s (Kaysha Corinealdi), and prison abolitionism in Czechia (Adéla Vavříková).

We also continue our new section in the magazine of intergenerational transmission entitled “Learning With Our Elders,” in which an activist/militant shares with us something they learn from a past mistake or failure. We hear from Eelam Tamil organizer Arivuchelvi.

If you prefer reading it in French, you can also order the francophone version.

84 pages
Deliverable worldwide

 


 

Optional: order your copy with our tote bag!

Tote Bag Maia