Adam Hochschild talks about two chapters in his latest book, one about surveillance and spying in the U.S. and the other about mining and people\u2019s livelihoods in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Namwali Serpell describes her new novel set in her native Zambia, and Max Haiven discusses the book he\u2019s written about art and financialization.\nAdam Hochschild, Lessons from a Dark Time and Other Essays University of California Press, 2018\nNamwali Serpell, The Old Drift Hogarth, 2019\nMax Haiven, Art after Money, Money after Art: Creative Strategies Against Financialization Pluto Press, 2018\nDesperate Holdings Real Estate and LandMind Spa, an exhibition at Dream Farm Commons in Oakland\n\xa0\nThe post Spying and Mining, Fiction and Art appeared first on KPFA.