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40 years of radical publishing

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  • Lewis Bassett
  • Natasha Lewis
  • Jennifer Tighe
  • Alberto Toscano
  • Alyssa Goldstein

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  • Paul Mason
  • McKenzie Wark
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  • Wu Ming
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    • Shlomo Sand
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Recently mentioned books

  • Why It's Still Kicking Off Everywhere
  • Soldier Box
  • The Spectacle of Disintegration
  • Altai
  • The Passion of Bradley Manning
  • See more books
    • Fanaticism
    • The Invention of the Land of Israel
    • The Beach Beneath the Street
    • Critique of Political Reason
    • The Meaning of the Second World War
    • Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
    • The Poorer Nations
    • The End of the Revolution
    • The Coming of the Book
    • The History of the Paris Commune of 1871
    • Street-Fighting Years
    • Artificial Hells
    • The Making of New World Slavery
    • Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?
    • Meltdown
    • I, Rigoberta Menchú
    • Praised Be Our Lords
    • Kashmir
    • The Persistence of the Old Regime
    • Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism
    • Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital
    • Panegyric
    • The Spectre of Comparisons
    • The Emancipated Spectator
    • A History of Gold and Money
    • Lineages of the Absolutist State
    • Comments on the Society of the Spectacle
    • Media Manifestos
    • The Rebirth of History
    • The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery
    • Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations
    • > View full catalog

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  • Belén Fernández on Tom Friedman's self-satire

    On the occasion of what appears to be one of Tom Friedman's most batshit crazy Times columns yet—its title: "Syria is Iraq"—Belén Fernández, author of The Imperial Messenger: Thomas Friedman at Work, curates the history of Friedman's imperious gut and what crises and hypocrises arise when we follow foreign policy initatives bred from organs unrelated to cognition.

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    By Ryan Healey / 27 July 2012 / 1 comment

  • Video: Tariq Ali's poem for Alex Cockburn's 70th

    In the below video, watch Tariq Ali read a poem for the late Alex Cockburn on the occasion of his 70th birthday. 

    By Ryan Healey / 26 July 2012 / post comment

  • All the world's a stage... No, really — Claire Bishop on participatory art and Artificial Hells

    Claire Bishop, author of Artificial Hells: Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship, writes for the Guardian this week on the history and current popularity of participatory art. Bishop contextualises where Tino Sehgal’s latest work These Associations, which opened to the public this week as the 13th Unilever Commission in the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern gallery in London. 

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    By Tessa Morrison / 25 July 2012 / post comment

  • Alexander Cockburn (1941-2012)

    It is with great sadness that we learn of the death of Alexander Cockburn, our good friend and staunch comrade, a wonderfully gifted writer and courageous journalist. We were privileged to publish half a dozen of his books, each major contributions to the culture and politics of the Left. Corruptions of Empire, published in 1988, displayed the impressive range of his writings, from trenchant indictments of imperialism and biting satire of liberal humbug to lyrical memories of his childhood and sardonic observation of the ruling order. Fate of the Forest: Developers, Destroyers and Defenders of the Amazon, written with Susanna Hecht, remains an exemplary account of a ravaged planet. Washington Babylon, written with Ken Silverstein, is a classic exposé of US politics and business.  Each of these books went through many editions.

    Across more than four decades Cockburn was a relentless and prophetic opponent of  US  militarism—his brothers Patrick and Andrew ensured that Alexander’s polemics were very well informed. We were proud to publish such works as Imperial Crusades (2004), written with Jeffrey St Clair and exploring the interconnections of the US wars of intervention. Alexander wrote for a wide spectrum of  publications,  with columns at different epochs in the Los Angeles Times  and the Wall Street Journal as well as the Village Voice (in its heyday) and the Nation.  ‘Press Clips’ in the Village Voice set new standards for scrutiny of print and broadcast media.  Alexander’s ‘Beat the Devil’ column in the Nation ran for nearly three decades and established him as the most radical, literate, consistent,  uncompromising—and witty—voice of the Left in the United States.  Cockburn was a long-time editor of the London-based New Left Review.  In the 1990s, with Jeffrey St Clair, Alexander founded Counterpunch, the much-consulted political newsletter and website. The response to 9/11 was soon to show the necessity for independent media outlets. At some future date we hope to contribute to an appropriate memorial to ‘Alexander the Brilliant’ - as Edward Said once called him. In the meantime, all our sympathy goes out to his cruelly-bereaved family and friends.

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    By Tessa Morrison / 23 July 2012 / 3 comments

  • An Unfinished Revolution reviewed in Against the Current

    Derrick Morrison reviewed An Unfinished Revolution, Robin Blackburn's latest book on the Civil War's impact on Marx and Marx's impact on America, in Solidarity's Against the Current. Calling the book "a good read and an extraordinary handbook on the Civil War," Morrison analyzes Blackburn's account of the relationship between Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx and of how "a war to 'preserve the Union,' a war to defend the Constitution, became a war for revolutionary democracy, a war to overturn the system of chattel slavery."

    Visit Against the Current to read the review in full.

    By Rebecca Nathanson / 20 July 2012 / post comment

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