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  • A Move Forward for the Korean Women’s Movement

    A Move Forward for the Korean Women’s Movement

    In response to high-profile accusations of sexual assault and the gathering storm around the prevelance of spy cam footage in the Korean porn industry, the past year has seen a snowballing women's movement in the traditionally conservative Korean society. In this article, So Yun Alysha Park looks at the tactics of the movement and its chances for enacting lasting change.

  • Pascale Casanova: World Citizen of Letters

    Pascale Casanova: World Citizen of Letters

    Pioneering scholar of world literature Pascale Casanova died on 29th September at the age of 59. This essay by Xavier de La Porte originally published in L'Obs, looks back at her life and her work.

  • Jewophobia

    Jewophobia

    This summer, scandals around anti-semitism in the Labour party, and British society more generally, have flared up repeatedly. Yet, amidst the slanging match, nobody has stopped to develop an account of anti-Semitism capable of explaining both its persistence in contemporary Britain and its improper mobilisation as an allegation. In this piece, an extract from an essay in the forthcoming issue of Salvage, Barnaby Raine argues that it is precisely in developing a rigorous theory of anti-Semitism, one that moves away from conspiratorial thinking, is now an urgent task for the left.

  • Pascale Casanova: Beckett's combinatorial art

    Pascale Casanova: Beckett's combinatorial art

    Literary critic and pioneering scholar of world literature Pascale Casanova died on September 29, 2018, at the age of 59. Her works include the landmark study The World Republic of Letters, as well as books on Kafka, Beckett, and literary nationalism.

    In this, the first chapter to her Samuel Beckett: Anatomy of a Literary Revolutionshe argues, via a reading of Beckett's Worstward Ho, against Blanchot's reading of Beckett as offering a testament to the 'unsayable'. Instead, she argues that Worstward Ho "is a summit of Beckett's ars combinatoria, prodigiously controlled and devised, the magisterial conclusion to the whole oeuvre."

  • Power without work: Morocco under Mohammed VI

    Power without work: Morocco under Mohammed VI

    Recent years have seen a hardening of the regime of King Mohammed VI of Morocco. Increasingly protests in the country have been met with repression of dissidents, culminating in the arrest of more than 400 activist from the Northern Rif region. In this interview, Spanish journalist Ignacio Cembrero details the recent history of Morocco and the future of the nation.

  • Common Wealth: workers' ownership in the history of socialism

    Common Wealth: workers' ownership in the history of socialism

    During the Labour Party conference, John McDonnell announced plans for Inclusive Ownership Funds, through which 10% of the shares of large corporations would be owned by the company's workers. This isn't the first time that workers' ownership of industry has been proposed. In this article, Matt Bruenig charts the development of the idea from Rudolf Hilferding to the Meidner Plan, and arges that democratic ownership is a crucial step on the road to a democratic socialist future.