
Fredric Jameson: a theory bookshelf
Books from the leading Marxist critic, alongside related reading including Sartre, Adorno, and Žižek.

Books from the leading Marxist critic, alongside related reading including Sartre, Adorno, and Žižek.

Organizer and writer Alyssa Battistoni selects five authors who have shaped her relationship to political organizing.

Andy Beckett on why he believes, despite being in power on both sides of the Atlantic, conservatism is in decline and how conservative ideology is proving itself unable to adjust to the challenges of the 21st century, with Alex Doherty on the Politics Theory Other podcast.

"How can we make sense of the passage of the party from serving up fierce class warriors determined to put the labour movement and the working class in its place, to a transparently self-serving charlatan happy to 'fuck business'?" Phil Burton-Cartledge on the election of Boris Johnson as Prime Minister, and what it says about a Conservative Party in terminal decline.

How can we make sense of the passage of the Conservative party from serving up fierce class warriors determined to put the labour movement and the working class in its place, to a transparently self-serving charlatan happy to “fuck business” and drive the UK economy over a cliff in pursuit of the fancies and phantasms of a no deal Brexit? Phil Burton-Cartledge analyses what Boris Johnson, Britain's new prime minister, means for the Conservative party.

The United States is currently ground zero in the war against migrants and refugees waged by the global police state. Yet, it is also central to the resistance to that war. Yet, this resistance has so far been driven mainly by a moral outrage and appeals to social justice. In this essay, William I. Robinson offers 5 thesis to considerations necessary to put forward an analysis of the political and structural forces that drive the war against migrants and refugees.

We need a comprehensive vision of ecological reconstruction — and that means having geoengineering as part of our vision.

The progression of the Algerian football team to the final of the African Cup of Nations, the first for 29 years, has sparked both wild scenes of jubilation from the Algerian diaspora across France as well as a racist backlash fuelled by right-wing theories of a ‘great replacement'. In this article, Hector Uniacke discusses the political situation in both France and Algeria, and the high stakes of tonight's final against Senegal.

Over the course of the ‘Labour antisemitism’ controversy that has raged over the past few years, the party’s readiness to sanction or expel members who have expressed ‘anti-Jewish’ stereotypes has become the litmus test of its commitment to combating antisemitism. But, what are stereotypes, and are all stereotypes instances of animus towards the group in question?

In Playing the Whore, sex workers' demands, too long relegated to the margins, take center stage: sex work is work, and sex workers' rights are human rights.

In People's Republic of Walmart, Leigh Phillips and Michal Rozworski argue that planning on vast scales is possible, and it works. But when Sears's Ayn Rand-loving owner introduced internal markets because he was so horrified at central planning inside capitalist firms, things quickly fell apart.

Americans in ‘conservative’ states are leading the fight for public education, healthcare and social services.