Blog

  • Herbert Marcuse, a thinker to wake up the left

    Herbert Marcuse, a thinker to wake up the left

    Herbert Marcuse's ideas animated young people's protests in 1968, but today he's rarely discussed. Simon Blin argues that it's time to return to Marcuse's radical ideas in order to think anew about the struggles we face today.

  • Mike Davis (1946 –2022): Enemy of the State

    Mike Davis (1946 –2022): Enemy of the State

    Verso is extremely sad to announce the death of our friend and comrade Mike Davis, the pioneering historian of the US working class and fierce critic of the economic, political, and military apparatuses of the US state machine and the brutalities of empires in general.

  • Mike Davis on becoming a Marxist

    Mike Davis on becoming a Marxist

    After losing a coveted niche in the trucking industry, I started UCLA as an adult freshman, attracted by rumors of a high-powered seminar on Capital led by Bob Brenner in the History Department.

  • Literature of the Revolution

    Literature of the Revolution

    The author Hilary Mantel, who died on the 22nd September at the age of 70, is best remembered as the celebrated author of the Wolf Hall trilogy that follows the rise to power of Thomas Cromwell in the court of Henry VIII. In this interview with John Rees and Paul McGarr, originally published after the release of her great historical novel about the French Revolution A Place of Greater Safety in 1992, she discusses her early political formation on the left, and the relationship between politics and literature.

  • Cover Stories: Is Mother Dead

    Cover Stories: Is Mother Dead

    "I found very appealing the idea of a surveillance spiral between a mother and her daughter"—artist, María Medem, talks us through the design process for Is Mother Dead.

  • Charisse Burden-Stelly and Jodi Dean introduce Claudia Jones

    Charisse Burden-Stelly and Jodi Dean introduce Claudia Jones

    Charisse Burden-Stelly and Jodi Dean introduce Claudia Jone's essay, "An End to the Neglect of the Problems of the Negro Woman!,” an essay that extends and complements the crucial and hard-to-access writings collected in Organize, Fight, Win.