Verso
  • About
  • Authors
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Discussions
  • Events
  • Subjects

40 years of radical publishing

Log In / Register
Forget your password?
or cancel

Recent contributors

  • Lewis Bassett
  • Jennifer Tighe
  • Jisu Kim
  • Natasha Lewis
  • Alberto Toscano

Recently mentioned authors

  • Joe Glenton
  • McKenzie Wark
  • Rigoberta Menchú
  • Wu Ming
  • Paul Mason
  • All authors
    • Shlomo Sand
    • Sujatha Fernandes
    • Vivek Chibber
    • Chase Madar
    • Medea Benjamin

Recently mentioned books

  • Soldier Box
  • Altai
  • The Spectacle of Disintegration
  • Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital
  • The Passion of Bradley Manning
  • See more books
    • The Invention of the Land of Israel
    • The Meaning of the Second World War
    • Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
    • Fanaticism
    • The Beach Beneath the Street
    • The Coming of the Book
    • The History of the Paris Commune of 1871
    • Drone Warfare
    • The Making of New World Slavery
    • Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?
    • Meltdown
    • Close to the Edge
    • The Persistence of the Old Regime
    • Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism
    • Why It's Still Kicking Off Everywhere
    • I, Rigoberta Menchú
    • A History of Gold and Money
    • Lineages of the Absolutist State
    • Panegyric
    • The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery
    • Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations
    • Comments on the Society of the Spectacle
    • > View full catalog

Follow Verso

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • RSS Feed

Links

  • Bookforum
  • Counterpunch
  • Democracy Now!
  • Guernica
  • Harper's
  • Indypendent
  • London Review of Books
  • Mondoweiss
  • N+1
  • Nation
  • New Statesman
  • New York Review of Books
  • TomDispatch
  • New Left Review
  • Radical Philosophy
  • New Left Project
  • Counterfire
  • Red Pepper
  • Electronic Intifada
  • Open Democracy
  • Lenin's Tomb
  • Sit Down Man ...
  • Infinite Thought
  • ReadySteadyBook
  • Stir
  • libcom.org
  • The Return of the Public
  • Dissent
  • Morning Star
  • Review31
  • Cabinet

Archives

2013

  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2012

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2011

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2010

  • December
  • November
  • October
  • September
  • August
  • July
  • June
  • May
  • April
  • March
  • February
  • January

2009

  • September
  • May
  • January
  • The Return of Socialism

    On June 23, John Nichols, author of The "S" Word: : A Short History of an American Tradition ... Socialism, joined Phil Gasper in Madison, WI for an event to discuss the history of socialism in America and its increasing popularity during today's crisis of capitalism. The event was sponsored by the International Socialist Organization, Haymarket Books, Verso Books, and WORT 89.9 FM Madison.

    "One does not need to be a socialist to understand that socialism has been a part of this country's journey from the start."—John Nichols

    By Clara Heyworth / 29 June 2011 / post comment

  • LIVE from London via Democracy Now! this weekend: Slavoj Žižek and Julian Assange in conversation

    In case you hadn't heard, Slavoj Žižek, author most recently of Living in the End Times and Julian Assange, WikiLeaks editor-in-chief, will be in conversation on stage in London this weekend for an event moderated by Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman. 

    For those in the UK, a few tickets remain (at the time of writing) for this meeting of "the most dangerous philosopher in the west" and "the most dangerous man in the world."

    And thanks to Democracy Now!, US viewers can watch the discussion from afar: the event will be broadcast live at democracynow.org from 11am EDT this Saturday July 2. You can even submit questions for Žižek and Assange—see this, from the DN! website:

    Within the past year, whistleblower website WikiLeaks has released three of the most significant leaks of classified information in history: the Iraq War Logs, the Guantánamo Bay files and Cablegate. Since then the world has undoubtedly changed. Ambassadors have resigned amid scandals exposed by leaked cables; governments have ordered reviews of their computer security; and pro-democracy movements have swept across the Middle East and North Africa-in part fueled, some believe, by WikiLeaks revelations ...

    You can post your questions for the panelists ahead of time on the Democracy Now! Facebook page and submit them to the Frontline Club by emailing events@frontlineclub.com with the subject line "Question 2 July."

    Focusing on the ethics and philosophy behind WikiLeaks' work, the talk will provide a rare opportunity to hear two of the world's most prominent thinkers discuss some of the most pressing issues of our time.

    It will also mark the publication of the paperback edition of Žižek's Living in the End Times, in which he argues that new ways of using and sharing information, in particular WikiLeaks, are one of a number of harbingers of the end of global capitalism as we know it.

    Visit Democracy Now! for more information.

    By Clara Heyworth / 29 June 2011 / post comment

  • "A challenge for the political future"–The American Crucible reviewed in the Independent

    Reviewing The American Crucible in the Independent, Stephen Howe highlights the originality of Robin Blackburn's contribution:

    If the thousands of historians who have written about Atlantic slavery and its abolition, only a handful have ever given us a really original perspective on that vast subject. Even fewer have proposed a satisfying, or stimulating, general theory about it, an attempt at explaining the rise, fall and enduring consequences of the entire New World slave system across the centuries and continents. Robin Blackburn is prominent—even pre-eminent—among those few. He has tackled the task in a formidable body of work beginning in the late 1980s; but in a rather idiosyncratic way.

    Continue Reading

    By Andrea D'Cruz / 28 June 2011 / post comment

  • Blair puts The Prophet trilogy by Isaac Deutscher on his list of 'Desert Island Books'

    While George W. Bush may be a touch disappointed to find his Decision Points omitted, we're sure Isaac Deutscher would have been more than a bit alarmed to find his sympathetic three-volume biography of Trotsky listed among Tony Blair's 'Desert Island Books.'

    Continue Reading

    By Andrea D'Cruz / 27 June 2011 / post comment

  • Lockdown High: The War on Drugs Goes to School

    Truthout has run an excerpt from Annette Fuentes' Lockdown High: When the Schoolhouse Becomes a Jailhouse. The excerpt, adapted from chapter 5 of the book, "The War on Drugs Goes to School," opens with a portrait of one Chris Steffner, a "true believer in the national movement to randomly drug-test students."

    Chris Steffner strode to the front of the packed audience, shunning the podium to deliver her sermon Oprah-style with a wireless mic transmitting the Word loud and clear. The pert, petite blonde is principal of Colts Neck High School in Monmouth County, New Jersey, and a true believer in the national movement to randomly drug-test students in order to save them from themselves and the perceived epidemic of youth drug and alcohol abuse. Steffner was among nine presenters at this, the second Regional Drug Testing Summit of 2007, organized by the federal Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) and held at the Hilton Hotel near Newark International Airport on February 27.

    Continue Reading

    By Clara Heyworth / 27 June 2011 / post comment

  • < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 >
Verso
  • About
  • Authors
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Discussions
  • Events
  • Subjects

40 years of radical publishing

Log In / Register
Forget your password?
or cancel