When women workers’ anger exploded onto the streets of Petrograd on International Women’s Day in 1917, it lit a fuse that was to turn the world upside down.
A revolution made by ordinary people that had the power to change everything - that is the story we follow through the lives of two young people Natalia and Peter.
This book takes each chapter of the first volume of Capital in turn, leading the reader through Marx's key arguments and offering insights that can provide further illumination.
As austerity bites and new debates about oppression rage, Judith Orr steers a path through the history and future of the fight for women’s liberation.
Slorach’s groundbreaking and accessible book will demonstrate the relevance of a Marxist understanding of disability to a whole new generation of disability activists
In Lenin for Today John Molyneux rejects the conventional view that Lenin had a dictatorial attitude to working people and thus paved the way for Stalinism.
Martin Empson draws on a Marxist understanding of history to grapple with the contradictory potential of our relationship with our environment.
The remarkable memoir by Marek Edelman, member of the Warsaw Ghetto Resistance five-person command team
This book seeks to challenge the idea that racism is inevitable by taking a critical look at the origins and history of racism in Britain and abroad.
Marx’s Capital is back where it belongs, at the centre of debate about Marxism and its purchase on the contemporary world.
As Dave Sherry shows in this accessible history, working class people suffered during WWI, but also began to fight back in the Russian and German revolutions.
The general strike of 1842, the first of its kind, involved up to half a million workers from Dundee to South Wales to Cornwall.