
Blog
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Traverso and Lukács: notes for discussion
Placing The Destruction of Reason among the classics of Marxism, Enzo Traverso posits the discussion of Lukács’ most controversial book on the right track.
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A Catholic God does not exist
From Pope Francis to Pascal’s Provincial Letters, a new essay in historical detection from Carlo Ginzburg, peerless author of Nevertheless
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Max Weber, victim of police violence
Sonia Herzbrun-Dayan, Michael Löwy and Eleni Varikas on Max Weber
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Mass Mobilisation of the Multitude is the Only Solution
Frédéric Lordon on the revolutions of our time.
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How to Be a Revolutionary: A Letter from the Editor
Author C. A. Davids was born and lives in Cape Town, but has lived in New York and Shanghai, and in this formally complex and transnational novel, she sets these worlds into orbit around each other, but doesn’t try to make them neatly align.
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70% off January sale!
Stock up on some of our best books for the year ahead.
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Not Life, Just Stuff
On American Beauty, Herbert Marcuse and Erich Fromm, and what each can teach us about the nature of human needs under capitalism.
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In Memory of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht
Paul Levi remembers the murdered German Communists.
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Maid’s Bibliotherapy
Maid, the recent Netflix miniseries, follows Alex as she moves from underemployed gig worker to a creative writing degree. In doing so it embodies another form of the capitalist progress narrative where everone becomes an indebted investor in their own human capital.
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Monotheistic Secularism
Jean-Luc Nancy on religion in the modern world.
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Raymond Williams: When Was Modernism?
Here, published for the first time, is an extract from the renowned socialist cultural theorist Raymond Williams's famous ‘When Was Modernism?’ lecture, delivered at the University of Bristol in March 1987, and taken from the newly published Culture and Politics: Class, Writing, Socialism – the first Williams book for more than three decades to include new material.










