Blog

  • Rachael the replicant in Ridley Scott's Blade Runner.

    On Nick Land

    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: We need to question why there are migrants

    Kate Evans: We need to question why there are migrants

    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.

  • Threads: From the Refugee Crisis: 40% off

    Threads: From the Refugee Crisis: 40% off

    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.

  • C. 2015 gathering of the Paris Entrepreneurs Network.

    The Beating Heart of Macronism

    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.

  • Hungarian Bolshevik propaganda poster, 1919. via Wikimedia Commons.

    Georg Lukács During War and Revolution

    Lukács discusses his experiences during the years of World War I, the Russian Revolution, and the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic, for which he served as the People's Commissar for Education and Culture. 

  • Labour 2017 Reading List

    Labour 2017 Reading List

    Labour have fought one of the most impressive campaigns under Jeremy Corbyn as leader, gaining 29 seats in an election that has changed the political landscape of Britain. Here we present a list of books that look at the history of the Labour party and the wider political context that has led to this moment.

  • Eleven Episodes from the Six-Day War

    Eleven Episodes from the Six-Day War

    Last week marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Six-Day War, in which the Israeli military occupied the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Sinai Peninsula and Golan Heights. In a strikingly illustrated essay for the Funambulist blog, Léopold Lambert reconstructs eleven crucial moments from the pivotal war.

    Click here to read on.

  • Sex work and Abortion in Ireland

    Sex work and Abortion in Ireland

    Those alarmed by the bigotry-driven abortion policy, on both sides of the Irish border, should similarly be concerned by policies on prostitution that undermine sex workers’ safety.


  • No professional will ever make the revolution

    No professional will ever make the revolution

    No past revolution, she says, can be attributed to professional revolutionaries. Usually it was the other way around: “revolution broke out and liberated, as it were, the professional revolutionaries from wherever they happened to be – from jail, or from the coffee house, or from the library.”

    Five great amateurs whose work changed the world, from author of The Amateur, Andy Merrifield. 

    The Amateur: The Pleasures of Doing What You Love is 40% off, included free bundled ebook, until Sunday, June 18 at midnight UTC. Click here to access the discount.

  • September 2016 test launch of a Trident II D5 missile. 

    Notes on Late Exterminism, the Trump Stage of Civilization

    Trump’s election has raised the specter of nuclear war in a way unseen since the 1980s, the last time a global mass movement pushed back against the threat of nuclear catastrophe. One of the major intellectual forces behind that mass movement was E.P. Thompson. With the utopian hopes surrounding the ban treaty now meeting the actually existing dystopia of US policy, it is high time for an update to Thompson’s seminal concept of “exterminism.”