|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This comprehensive collection draws upon and reengages with a long
history of Marxian-anchored thought to analyze the potential for
social transformation through a reinvigorated radical Left, all
within the context of the ascendance of an increasingly
ethnonationalist, patriarchal, and authoritarian far Right
worldwide. The authors identify and reflect on strategies, tactics,
and possibilities for analyzing and intervening in advanced
capitalist societies by increasing and deepening popular
participation and support on the far Left. The chapters are framed
in terms of conceptualizing the capitalist present, organizing "the
people" and reimagining the radical Left. Together, in diverse ways
that draw upon both qualitative and quantitative approaches, the
authors evaluate the difficulties of augmentation across multiple
planes, from the tension between migrants and citizen workers, to
the uneasy relationship between sovereignty and class, to the
contradictions operating across international versus domestic
dynamics. How and why (if at all) should the radical Left reexamine
its understanding of political consciousness, identity, ideology,
and institutions, as they relate to Marxian analysis and various
threads of critical theory? The authors suggest new approaches for
understanding what the radical Left is up against and how
problematic barriers might be torn down, thus disrupting unhelpful
binaries such as state versus capital, national versus
international, worker versus migrant, activist versus candidate,
and freedom versus necessity. This book was originally published as
a special issue of the online journal Global Discourse.
This comprehensive collection draws upon and reengages with a long
history of Marxian-anchored thought to analyze the potential for
social transformation through a reinvigorated radical Left, all
within the context of the ascendance of an increasingly
ethnonationalist, patriarchal, and authoritarian far Right
worldwide. The authors identify and reflect on strategies, tactics,
and possibilities for analyzing and intervening in advanced
capitalist societies by increasing and deepening popular
participation and support on the far Left. The chapters are framed
in terms of conceptualizing the capitalist present, organizing "the
people" and reimagining the radical Left. Together, in diverse ways
that draw upon both qualitative and quantitative approaches, the
authors evaluate the difficulties of augmentation across multiple
planes, from the tension between migrants and citizen workers, to
the uneasy relationship between sovereignty and class, to the
contradictions operating across international versus domestic
dynamics. How and why (if at all) should the radical Left reexamine
its understanding of political consciousness, identity, ideology,
and institutions, as they relate to Marxian analysis and various
threads of critical theory? The authors suggest new approaches for
understanding what the radical Left is up against and how
problematic barriers might be torn down, thus disrupting unhelpful
binaries such as state versus capital, national versus
international, worker versus migrant, activist versus candidate,
and freedom versus necessity. This book was originally published as
a special issue of the online journal Global Discourse.
What does the future hold for the left? How does the left adapt to,
and prepare for, the crises of our time? In moments of crisis it is
always important to rethink longstanding assumptions, jettison
wishful thinking and dated ideas, and recover wisdom from the past.
In so doing, we have the opportunity to plot a new way forward. The
authors of this edited collection do just this: putting forward a
diversity of approaches and issues to strategize for the work that
awaits us in the 2020s, particularly in the struggle against
capitalism, climate change and the far right. Working within five
major thematic areas, the contributors examine how to engage
working class people in anti-capitalist struggles, undermine
reactionary currents of ethno-nationalism while supporting
anti-colonial movements, strategically build power inside and
outside the state apparatus, demand new forms of resistance to
address environmental crises, and effectively promote solidarity
and ecological responsibility. This book provides suggestions for
working with popular disaffection, taking the rich, fragmented,
conflicted history of refusals and defeats as a starting point for
next steps in the struggle against capitalism and the far right,
rather than as the basis for more conflict or defeatism.
|
Tao Te Ching (Paperback)
John Braun, Julian von Bargen, David Warkentin
|
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|