Blog

  • New Left Review 140/141, out now

    New Left Review 140/141, out now

    Aaron Benanav and Tim Barker on the US economy, Hito Steyerl on AI, Grey Anderson on NATO, a previously unpublished early text from Tom Nairn and much more…
  • Statement by La Fabrique authors

    Statement by La Fabrique authors

    In honour of World Press Freedom Day, we are publishing this statement from La Fabrique's authors in solidarity with La Fabrique's rights manager, Ernest, who was outrageously arrested by UK anti-terrorism police upon his arrival in London from Paris on 17 April.
  • A change of strategy

    A change of strategy

    Marx’s texts from the 1850s onwards took a different approach to his previous work: different not only in their style but also their concepts and formats, but united by their object – capitalism – grasped from different angles and viewpoints.

  • Why We Need Benjamin Lay

    Why We Need Benjamin Lay

    Benjamin Lay was a class-conscious, race-conscious, gender-conscious, environmentally conscious man with a fully integrated radical worldview; he was “intersectional” almost three centuries ago!
  • Faith in Liberation

    Faith in Liberation

    Lucien Goldmann, the tearaway son of a Romanian Rabbi who would become one of the greatest Marxist sociologists of literature and culture, maintained a lifelong commitment to liberation and to particular form of socialist humanism. Here, Madoc Cairns charts his personal and intellectual development from the tumultuous years in the Romanian communist party of the 1930s to his pioneering studies of Kant and Pascal in post-war France, and the vital role he played in the development of a Marxist study of culture.

  • What is class today?

    What is class today?

    Common Wealth’s Amelia Horgan spoke to historian Gabriel Winant about class in the twenty-first century. Gabriel Winant is the author of The Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt America (Harvard University Press: 2021).