Blog post

New Left Review - Issue 88 out now

John Merrick16 October 2014

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The July/August issue of New Left Review is now on sale, featuring the following essays:


Emily Morris: Unexpected Cuba


Alone among the ex-Comecon countries, Cuba has forged a distinctive path since 1991—not transition to capitalism but careful adjustment to external change, safeguarding its gains in social provision and national sovereignty. Emily Morris challenges the view that Havana will have to embrace the market and submit to foreign capital if it is to survive.

Marco d'Eramo: UNESCOcide


From Venice to Edinburgh, Porto to Rhodes, San Gimignano to Luang Prabang—the World Heritage label as vital tool for the global tourist industry, but death sentence for the hurly-burly of real urban life.

Gleb Pavlovsky: Putin's World Outlook


Former Kremlin advisor and election manager offers a unique account of the Russian leader’s ideological formation and worldview. A Soviet-realist analysis of the failings of the USSR and the actual motivations of the capitalist states.

Kevin Pask: Mosaics of American Nationalism

Annealed through expansionism after the Civil War, could America’s sectional divisions re-emerge if the empire falters? Kevin Pask explores the changing parameters—closing frontiers, rising Sunbelt—of the nationalism that dares not speak its name.

Jean-Paul Sartre: Marxism and Subjectivity


Transcript of Sartre’s 1961 Lecture at the Istituto Gramsci in Rome, previously unpublished in English. A sustained philosophical riposte to Lukács’s History and Class Consciousness and argument for a concept of subjectivity as process, vividly illustrated in concrete situations. 

Fredric Jameson: Sartre's Actuality


Reflections on the occasion of the Rome Lecture and on its themes. Dialectic of the inside and the outside, the surprising role of non-knowledge in subjectivity—and new technologies and labour processes as experiential grounds for transformation in class consciousness. 

NLR 88 also features the following book reviews:


Wolfgang Streeck on Peter Mair, Ruling the Void.

Diagnosis of Western democracy’s hollowing in the final work of a political-science master.

Michael Christofferson on Christophe Prochasson, François Furet.

A former colleague supplies the case for the defence.

Kristin Surak on David Pilling, Bending Adversity.

Hopes for a Thatcherized Japan in Fukushima’s wake from the FT’s man in Tokyo.

Hung Ho-Fung on Leo Panitch & Sam Gindin, The Making of Global Capitalism.

Canada provides the model for America’s frictionless rise to global supremacy.