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The Argentine-born writer Adolfo Gilly has directly observed many
of Latin America's most dramatic events, from the Bolivian
Revolution of the 1950s and Cuba during the Missile Crisis to the
guerrilla wars of Central America and Mexico's Zapatista uprising.
Paths of Revolution presents the first representative selection
from across his extensive body of work, collecting close-quarters
reportage, sharp political analyses and reflections on art and
letters. A living link between the New Left of the 1960s and the
Pink Tide of recent decades, Gilly once described the twentieth
century as a series of lightning flashes which can illuminate our
present-day predicament. The essay form is where he fully comes
into his own, covering a truly impressive range of topics and
places. This collection draws out the continuities within one of
the world's more vibrant and politically successful left
traditions. In the Introduction, Tony Wood (author of Russia
Without Putin) offer an overall portrait of Gilly's life and work.
The extended critical interview is especially flexible as a form,
by turns tenacious and glancing, elliptical or sustained, combining
argument and counter-argument, reflection, history and memoir with
a freedom normally denied to its subjects in conventional writing
formats. Lives on the Left brings together sixteen such interviews
from New Left Review in a group portrait of intellectual engagement
in the twentieth century and since. Four generations of
intellectuals discuss their political histories and present
perspectives, and the specialized work for which they are, often,
best known. Their recollections span the century from the Great War
and the October Revolution to the present, ranging across Europe,
the Americas, Africa and Asia. Psychoanalysis, philosophy, the
gendering of private and public life, capital and class formation,
the novel, geography, and language are among the topics of
theoretical discussion. At the heart of the collection, in all its
diversity of testimony and judgement, is critical experience of
communism and the tradition of Marx, relayed now for a new
generation of readers. Lives on the Left includes interviews with
Georg Lukacs, Hedda Korsch, Jean-Paul Sartre, Dorothy Thompson,
Jir?i Pelikan, Ernest Mandel, Luciana Castellina, Lucio Colletti,
K. Damodaran, Noam Chomsky, David Harvey, Adolfo Gilly, Joao Pedro
Stedile, Asada Akira, Wang Hui and Giovanni Arrighi. New Left
Review was founded in 1960 in London, which has remained its base
ever since. In fifty years of publication, it has won an
international reputation as an independent journal of socialist
politics and ideas, attracting readers and contributors from every
part of the world. A Spanish-language edition is published
bi-monthly from Madrid.
This is a comprehensive study of insurrection in Bolivia, from the
late eighteenth century to the present day. In an age of military
neoliberalism, social movements, and centre-Left coalition
governments have advanced across South America, sparking hope for
radical change in a period otherwise characterized by regressive
imperial and anti-imperial politics. Nowhere do the limits and
possibilities of popular advance stand out as they do in Bolivia,
the most heavily indigenous country in the Americas. Revolutionary
Horizons traces the rise to power of Evo Morales' new
administration, whose announced goals are to end imperial
domination and internal colonialism through nationalization of the
country's oil and gas reserves, and to forge a new system of
political representation. In doing so, Hylton and Thomson provide
an anatomy of the popular insurgency that transformed state and
society from below, and chart the history of Bolivia's struggle
from the late-colonial period onwards. Revolutionary Horizons
offers a unique and timely window onto the challenges faced by
Morales' government and by the South American continent alike.
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