#72 - November 2016

Vol. 30, No. 3

Articles

Jan
Rehmann

Reflecting on the Bernie Sanders campaign from the perspective of an underlying crisis of hegemony, I'd like to show basically two things. 1. The astonishing appeal of the campaign can only be fully grasped if we take into account that...

Glenn
Kissack*

Introduction

On May 12, 2016, the Professional Staff Congress (PSC) – the union representing faculty and staff at the City University of New York –...

Julián Rebón, Denise Kasparian and Candela
Hernández

Introduction

The recuperation of enterprises by their workers in Argentina has achieved ample social legitimacy despite its disruptive...

Adnan
Sattar

Something startles me where I thought I was safest.
-- Walt Whitman1

Introduction

Penal policy in the West took a punitive turn in the mid-1980s. The period since the late ‘60s...

Julian
Markels

This essay attempts to establish both (a) a link between culture and politics and (b) a 150-year progression in socialist theory and practice that can enlarge our understanding of historical process. Dostoevsky and...

Sanya
Osha

The 17th annual Lagos Book and Art Festival (LABAF), which took place in November 2015, commemorated twenty years since Ken Saro-Wiwa’s passing. Its central theme was ‘Texts of Self-Determination’. The event was a concerted effort to...

Poetry

Orel
Protopopescu

The Monster of Profit
gnashes the teeth of its gears
and spits out fathers, mothers,
infants who root around for breasts
pumped dry by electricity.

The babies hug bottles
and rock themselves.
...

Peter Kamau
Mukuria

After the railroading by judges & lawyers,
After the inpod & outside recreation,
After the barbed wires & the fences,
What is left?

After the solitary confinement,
After the five-point...

Book Reviews

Reviewed by Steve
McGiffen

William A. PelzA People’s History of Modern Europe (London: Pluto Press, 2016), 288 pp., $28.)

These are momentous times in Europe. Having said that, it’s probable that I could have written the same...

Reviewed by Victor
Wallis

Ian Angus, Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System New York: Monthly Review Press, 2016), 277 pp., $19.

The Holocene is over. The Anthropocene has begun...

Reviewed by Peter
Seybold

Laurence Shoup, Wall Street’s Think Tank: The Council on Foreign Relations and the Empire of Neoliberal Geopolitics, 1976-2014 (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2015), 352 pp., $34.

Wall Street’s...

Reviewed by Wade A.
Bell Jr.

Howard Brick and Christopher Phelps, Radicals in America: The U.S. Left Since the Second World War (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015), 355 pp., $24.99.

...

Reviewed by Mat
Callahan

Inez Hedges, World Cinema and Cultural Memory (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 190 pp., $95.00.

It would appear that the distinction...

Reviewed by Ti-Grace
Atkinson

Roberta Salper, Domestic Subversive: A Feminist’s Take on the Left, 1960-1976 (Tucson, AZ: Anaphora Literary Press, 2014), 234 pp., $20.

...

Reviewed by Barbara H.
Chasin

David R. Pilgrim, Understanding Jim Crow: Using Racist Memorabilia to Teach Tolerance and to Promote Social Justice; Foreword by Henry Louis Gates (Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2015), 187...

Reviewed by Bob
Barber

Melanie E.L. Bush and Roderick D. Bush, Tensions in the American Dream: Rhetoric, Reverie, or Reality (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2015), 258 pp., $29.95.

...

Reviewed by Steve
Ellner

Alvaro García Linera, Plebeian Power: Collective Action and Indigenous, Working-Class and Popular Identities in Bolivia (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2014), 345 pp., $28.

...

***

Samuel Arnold is assistant professor of political science at Texas Christian University (TCU) in Fort Worth, Texas. His publications include articles on John Rawls’s theory of justice, fairness in the distribution of...