
Workers vs. Zombies: NYU grad students are on a sick-out to save (and reimagine) the university
The #sickoutNYU collective demands that NYU administrators respond meaningfully to calls for COVID crisis support.

The #sickoutNYU collective demands that NYU administrators respond meaningfully to calls for COVID crisis support.

The self-education of the ruling clique, with all its concomitant discipline, stifling of spontaneous impulses, cynical scepticism and blind lust to command, would not be possible if the oppressors did not themselves submit, through hirelings among the oppressed, to a part of the oppression they inflict on others.

Enzo Traverso on 'the Revolt of Nature' and how COVID-19 forces us to reconsider the blurred relationship between politics, economics, society and biology.

A reading list of US politics books on what to learn from the Bernie Sanders campaign, the legacy of Henry Wallace, the emotion driving members of the US Communist Party in the mid twentieth century and more.

An excerpt from The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte.

Jamie Allinson remembers Marxist historian, Neil Davidson, author of the groundbreaking How Revolutionary Were the Bourgeois Revolutions? who died May 3, 2020.

Now that the world has made men speechless, not to be on speaking terms is to be in the right. The wordless need only stick immovably to their interests and their natures to get their way.

At a time when reactionaries openly return to the crudest forms of racism, sexism and classism, left-wing alternatives cannot be bound by innately reactionary ideas of patriotism or nationalism.

In response to the current COVID-19 crisis the UK Biobank, that contains half a million people’s anonymised health and genetic information, may be used to answer questions about coronavirus. Becca Muir asks, are the biopolitics of these databases being ignored?

Laleh Khalili, author of Sinews of War and Trade, reports on the over 100,000 sailors who are quarantined on their ships, unable to return home or access adequate medical care.

Brazilian President, Jair Bolsonaro, has continuously underplayed the coronavirus crisis, calling it nothing but 'sniffles' but as the death rises, Matheus Lock explains how and why the pandemic reveals the flaws within his leadership that may prove fatal.

In partnership with The World Transformed, we present reading that offers new alternatives to Capitalism. All 50% off until May 24th.