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  • av Roy Bhaskar
    341

    Sets out to diagnose and explain all the major - old and new - "problems of philosophy". The book includes a synoptic account of the development of Western philosophy from the pre-Socratics to poststructuralism. It is designed to be both an introductory work and a resource for scholars.

  • av Jean-Claude Guillebaud
    277

    The photographer Raymond Depardon and the writer Jean-Claude Guillebaud both covered the Vietnam War. After 20 years, they decided to go back. Travelling by slow train, Russian car and bicycle, they travelled from South to North. This book is an account of these travels.

  • - Basic Income and Stakeholder Grants as Cornerstones for an Egalitarian Capitalism
    av Anne Alstott
    301

    In a system of basic income, as elaborated by Philippe van Paijs, all citizens are given a monthly stipend sufficiently high to provide them with a no-frills, but adequate standard of living.

  • - Journeys and Encounters
    av Alexander Cockburn
    511

    Both a diary of a radical's working life and a chronicle of the recent political past. His reflections are mixed with letters from Graham Greene, an interview with Noam Chomsky, personal friends and irate readers. Alexander Cockburn is the co-author, with Susanna Hecht, of "Corruptions of Empire".

  • - Marginal Notes on a Late-Twentieth-Century Miscarriage of Justice
    av Carlo Ginzburg
    301

    Historian Carlo Ginzburg here draws on his work on witchcraft trials in the 16th and 17th centuries to dissect the weaknesses and contradictions of the state's case in the late-20th century political show trial of Italian communists, Continua, Sofri, Bompressi and Piotresetafani.

  • - Washington's Faustian Bid for World Dominance
    av Peter Gowan
    381

    Argues that, since the collapse of the USSR, the US government has been trying to bring about a unipolar world in which the United States can control and shape the pattern of economic and political change in all regions of the globe.

  • - Studies in the Modern Architecture of Latin America 1930-1960
    av Valerie Fraser
    507

    The period between 1930 and 1960 in particular saw a dramatic upsurge in Latin American modern architecture as the various governments strove to make public their modernising intentions. After 1960, however, the year in which Brasilia was inaugurated, economic growth in the region slowed and the modernist project faltered. The English-speaking world, which had previously admired Latin American buildings, began to write them out of the history of twentieth-century architecture. Building the New World attempts to redress the balance. It surveys the most important examples of state-funded modernism in Latin America during a period of almost unimaginable optimism, when politicians and architects such as Pani, Costa, Reidy and Niemeyer sought ways, literally, to build their societies out of underdevelopment.

  • - Rewriting Chipko into Himalayan History
    av Haripriya Rangan
    331

  • - The Rise of the Gay Right
    av Richard Goldstein
    251

    This text rages against the move toward conservative, assimilationist politics promoted by some gay men and lesbians (homocons), embraced by a liberal medial all too eager to erase the progressive roots of the gay liberation movement.

  • - On the Writings of Kathy Acker
     
    301

    Kathy Acker was one of the original, subversive and influential writers of the late 20th century. This is a collection of essays on Acker's work, including Peter Wollen's primer, and Avital Ronell's meditation on friendship and mourning. It reveals his project, and the ways in which fiction can penetrate the heart of political and cultural life.

  • av Ernesto Laclau
    317

    The essays collected in this volume develop the theoretical perspective initiated in Laclau and Mouffe's Hegemony and Socialist Strategy in three main directions. First, by exploring the specificity of social antagonisms and answering the question ';What is an antagonistic relation?', an issue which has become increasingly crucial in our globalized world, where the proliferation of conflicts and points of rupture is eroding their links to the social subjects postulated by classical social analysis. This leads the author to a second line of questioning: what is the ontological terrain that allows us to conceive the nature of social relations in our heterogeneous world, a task that he addresses with theoretical instruments coming from analytical philosophy and from the phenomenological and structuralist traditions. Finally, central to the argument of the book is the basic role attributed to rhetorical movements metaphor, metonymy, catachresis in shaping the ';non-foundational' grounds of society.

  • av Alain Badiou
    267

    For Alain Badiou, theatreunlike cinemais the place for the staging of a truly emancipatory collective subject. In this sense theatre is, of all the arts, the one strictly homologous to politics: both theatre and politics depend on a limited set of texts or statements, collectively enacted by a group of actors or militants, which put a limit on the excessive power of the state. This explains why the history of theatre has always been inseparable from a history of state repression and censorship.This definitive collection includes not only Badious pamphlet Rhapsody for the Theatre but also essays on Jean-Paul Sartre, on the political destiny of contemporary theatre, and on Badious own work as a playwright, as author of the Ahmed Tetralogy.

  • - Remapping the History of the American Left
    av Paul Buhle
    381

  • av Jean-Paul Sartre
    547

  • - A Biography
    av Susan Weissman
    407

    Revolutionary novelist, historian, anarchist, Bolshevik and dissidentVictor Serge is one of the most compelling figures of Soviet history. Set against some of the momentous events of the twentieth century, Victor Serge reveals dauntless vigor of a man whose views often reflect the struggles of our own time.

  • - A Global Plague
    av Marc Perelman
    251

    Marc Perelman pulls no punches in this succinct and searing broadside, assailing the ';recent form of barbarism' that is the global sporting event. Forget the Olympics and consider, under Perelman's guidance, the ledger of inequities maintained by such supposedly harmless games.They have provided a smokescreen for the forcible removal of ';undesirables'; aided governments in the pursuit of racist agendas; affirmed the hypocrisy of drug-testing in an industry where doping is more an imperative than an aberration; and developed the pornographic hybrid that Perelman dubs ';sporn', a further twist in our corrupt obsession with the body.Drawing examples from the modern history of the international sporting event, Perelman argues that today's colosseums, upheld as examples of ';health', have become the steamroller for a decadent age fixated on competition, fame and elitism.

  • av Paul Nizan
    331

    The Conspiracy is the last and most acclaimed novel by French writer and activist Paul Nizan, who died two years after its publication fighting the Germans at the Battle of Dunkirk. Hailed by Jean-Paul Sartre as Nizan's masterpiece, the book centers upon the figure of Bertrand Rosenthal, a misguided philosophy student studying in pre-war Paris. Eager to foment a revolution and having little grasp of his own motives, Rosenthal draws a small group of disciples into a conspiracy both fatuous and deadly. Simultaneously, he plunges into a forbiddenand ultimately tragiclove affair as the intertwined plots move inexorably toward their twin destinations of betrayal and death.The Conspiracy won the coveted Prix Interalli in 1938. This new edition includes Walter Benjamin's critique of the book, available here for the first time in English.

  • - Reinventing Democracy From Greece To Occupy
    av Marina Sitrin & Dario Azzellini
    137

    Mass protest movements in disparate places such as Greece,Argentina, and the United States ultimately share an agendatoraise the question of what democracy should mean. These horizontalistmovements, including Occupy, exercise and claim participatorydemocracy as the ground of revolutionary social change today.Written by two international activist intellectuals and based on extensiveinterviews with movement participants in Spain, Venezuela,Argentina, across the United States, and elsewhere, this book is anexpansive portrait of the assemblies, direct democracy forums, andorganizational forms championed by the new movements, as wellas an analytical history of direct and participatory democracy fromancient Athens to Zuccotti Park. The new movements put forwardthe idea that liberal democracy is not democratic, nor was it ever.

  • av Fredric Jameson
    587

    A comprehensive analysis of the philosophy of the dialectic by the doyen of cultural criticism.

  • - Bread and Circuses
    av Jonathan Glancey
    261

    This illustrated guide to the changing architecture of London argues that new developments are a deliberate distraction from the city's economic and political problems.

  • av Nick Turse
    291

    Leading commentators examine the Afghan debacle and its parallels with previous British and Soviet occupations

  • av Alain Badiou
    251

    Claims that the election of Nicholas Sarkozy as President is not an event, nor is it the cause for wringing of hands and gnashing of teeth.

  • - The Jewish Paradigm
    av Esther Benbassa
    367

    An analysis of the discourse of victimhood in Judaism.

  • - Myths, Politics and Scholarship in Israel
    av Gabriel Piterberg
    367

    Examines the ideology and literature behind the colonization of Palestine, from the late nineteenth century onwards. Exploring Zionism's origins in Central-Eastern European nationalism and settler movements, this title shows how its texts can be placed within a discourse of western colonization.

  • - Futurist of the Nation
    av Regis Debray
    237

    In this study of De Gaulle, the author offers an indictment of the shallowness of contemporary politics in the West. He suggests that De Gaulle's disdain for electioneering reaffirms the vocation of political leadership as something other than adapting to popular preferences.

  • av Dan Hind
    127

    Confronts the great machinery of deception in which we live, and which threatens to destroy our civilization. In particular, the author takes to task a group of prominent intellectuals who have exaggerated the threat posed by the so-called forces of unreason - religion, postmodernism and other "mumbo-jumbo".

  • av Ernesto Laclau
    251

    Presents an argument as to how the changes of the late twentieth century have altered Enlightenment notions of "emancipation."

  • av Elisabeth Roudinesco
    351

    A biography of Theroigne de Mericourt, a woman who fought for the French revolution, was rejected by fellow-revolutionaries and went mad, ending her days in an asylum. The author uses her life to reflect on the role of women in politics and contemporary attitudes towards madness.

  • - The Crisis on Britain's Railways
    av Andrew Murray
    121

    Written by a Communications Officer for the train-drivers'union ASLEF, this volume exposes the history of mismanagement of Britain's rail network since privatization. A new afterword brings the story up to date, including details on the Potter's Bar accident.

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