April 2024 (Volume 75, Number 11)
Monthly Review
by The Editors
2w ago
buy this issue In a December 2023 interview with the Wall Street Journal, Richard Haass, former special assistant to H. W. Bush, declared that the world has descended into a “new world disorder,” lamenting the long-lost dream of unending U.S. hegemony. This month’s “Notes from the Editors” reflects on not only Haass’s recent statements, but his longstanding advocacy of an “Imperial America” designed to ensure U.S. domination on the world stage. | more… Source ..read more
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Extractivism in the Anthropocene
Monthly Review
by John Bellamy Foster
2w ago
This month’s Review of the Month by John Bellamy Foster illuminates the idea of extractivism, a key concept in understanding our current planetary crisis. The accelerated extraction of Earth’s resources since the mid-twentieth century, Foster notes, threatens not only the natural world, but the means of life for the entire planet. | more… Source ..read more
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On the Misery of Left Nietzscheanism, or Philosophy as Irrationalist Ideology
Monthly Review
by Matthew Sharpe
2w ago
This article will be released in full online April 8, 2023. Matthew Sharpe discusses Aymeric Monville’s Misère du nietzschéisme de gauche (The Misery of Left Nietzscheanism), an exploration of how Nietzsche’s popularity on the left co-opts truly radical energy in favor of authoritarianism and elitism. “If Monville is right,” Sharpe concludes, “Nietzcheanism has acted as a kind of ideological ‘useful idiot.'” | more… Source ..read more
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Old Age but No Rest: A Political-Economic Reflection on Delayed Retirement Policy
Monthly Review
by Cai Chao
2w ago
This article will be released in full online April 15, 2023. As populations worldwide grow older, politicians are clamoring to raise the retirement age, thus extending people’s working lives at their own expense. Using the lens of political economy, Cai Chao examines the false narratives behind capitalists’ claims that delayed retirement is necessary to maintain society’s productive capacity, and proposes solutions to promote human development at all life stages. | more… Source ..read more
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Who owns this ‘country’?
Monthly Review
by Marge Piercy
2w ago
A new poem by Marge Piercy. | more… Source ..read more
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The Ecological Crisis of Capitalism and Human Survival
Monthly Review
by Harry Magdoff
2w ago
This article will be released in full online April 29, 2023. In this remarkable reprise reprinted from Monthly Review‘s October 1992 issue, Harry Magdoff and Paul Sweezy look ahead to the ecological crisis that has continued to unfold into the twenty-first century. Presaging the critical juncture at which we find ourselves today, they write that “only a change in the in the nature of power structures on a global scale could bring a realistic hope for the long-term continuation of human civilization…. If you think that is true, what do you think are the implications?” | more… Source ..read more
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The Political Economy of Migration
Monthly Review
by Torkil Lauesen
2w ago
This article will be released in full online April 29, 2023. In this review of Immanuel Ness’s Migration as Economic Imperialism, Torkil Lauesen illuminates the links between the migration of labor to theories of equal exchange, which have traditionally focused on international trade. These connections, Lauesen writes, relate to transfer of labor power from the periphery to the core, and the concomitant exploitation of vulnerable workers from the Global South. | more… Source ..read more
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March 2024 (Volume 75, Number 10)
Monthly Review
by The Editors
1M ago
buy this issue Paul Burkett’s death on January 7, 2024, at age 67, means that the world is suddenly bereft of the figure who played the leading role over the last three decades in developing a Marxist ecological economics in the face of the growing planetary crisis. His loss leaves ecological Marxism without its foremost exponent of the ecological critique of capitalist value relations. It also means the loss of a warm and compassionate human being, and a beloved jazz musician. | more… Source ..read more
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Engels for Our Times: Gender, Social Reproduction, and Revolution
Monthly Review
by Marnie Holborow
1M ago
“It is surprising,” Marnie Holborow writes, “how often in Marxist accounts of women’s oppression Frederick Engels is overlooked.” In responding to this gap in analysis, Holborow examines his influential work, The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State, finding his observations on gender roles and social reproduction under capitalism—and their expressions based on class—are not only astute for Engels’s time, but very much for ours as well. | more… Source ..read more
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The Specter of ‘Knowledge as Commons’
Monthly Review
by Sam Popowich
1M ago
This article will be released in full online March 5, 2023. The recent arrest of Newsclick editor-in-chief Prabir Purkayastha is a chilling development in Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s campaign of repression against free media. The current “moral panic” being mobilized against Purkayashta, Sam Popowich notes, represents Modi’s attempt to gain popular legitimacy for his Hindutva program and silence dissent. | more… Source ..read more
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