
New Left Review, May/June 2017
The latest issue is now available.

The latest issue is now available.

In General Intellects I only touched on aesthetic questions. This essay extends my treatment there of Hiroki Azuma and Angela McRobbie, with a look at an influential book by Sianne Ngai.

Should we await le Grand Soir – the climactic "great night" of revolution? Or re-organise other common worlds in the here and now, making visible the capacities and intelligence of all those who live in them?

One of the most unexpected media storms of the 2017 general election was over the hashtag #Grime4Corbyn. In this extract from The Wire Primers, acclaimed music writer Simon Reynolds takes us on a tour of Grime's seminal records.

In this excerpt from Ibn Khaldun: The Birth of History and the Past of the Third World, Yves Lacoste shows how Ibn Khaldun's work refutes the myth of the "Arab invasions [of the Maghreb] of the eleventh century," despite the uses to which it has been put by the authors of the myth.

Michael Löwy reviews Enzo Traverso’s Left-Wing Melancholia. This article from Viento Sur was translated by David Broder.

Get your Verso tote bag and goodies at this Saturday 24th June's radical bookshop giveaway!

Verso presents a reading list of books that challenge and expose right-wing narratives about migrant workers and refugees.

In General Intellects there was only space to cover twenty-one influential theorists. I'm often asked why this or that figure is not in it. Here's an attempt to compress the work of Nick Land — one I'm most often asked about. And certainly one of the most controversial.

Kate Evans discusses her new book Threads: From the Refugee Crisis, a work of visual reportage through the medium of comic-book storytelling—and makes a compelling case for the compassionate treatment of refugees and the free movement of peoples.

During Refugee Week, Threads: From the Refugee Crisis is 40% off until June 25 at midnight UTC. Click here to activate your discount. Verso will donate £1 from every purchase to Médecins Sans Frontières.

If we can place any reasonable hope in the Macron presidency, it is that everything is going to become very, very obvious. Which is to say, odious like never before.