Rediscover pioneering works of feminism from leading writers: all 50% off until August 28 (click here to activate!). Includes new books from Kathi Weeks, and a groundbreaking history of Black women's lives in Britain by Beverley Bryan, Stella Dadzie, and Suzanne Scafe.
"We can't decide in the abstract which of any social relations is more determinant in any particular social phenomenon...we can't just say: race, class, which one is more important?"
"We have to come back to the straightforward explanation that this is a society which is structured by racial oppression and has been for its entire history."
A powerful challenge to the way we understand the politics of race and the history of anti-racist struggle.
The battle for legal abortion in Argentina is the starting point of a much broader struggle.
While the revival of reformist social democracy is cause for optimism, it cannot win a new world without mass pressure from below.
Washington's primary interest in Nicaragua is not getting rid of Ortega but in preserving the interests of transnational capital in the country and the hegemony of capital over any post-Ortega political project.
How did a young American woman, born to a secular, working-class New York Jewish family and raised during the Depression, end up in Algiers during a heady period of revolutionary fervor?
A reading list to engage with issues concerning the rise of the far-right, and the means of defending against it.
"Truly a force to be reckoned with." – The Debrief
“One of the most influential intellectuals of our time.” — Observer
Pioneering works of feminism from leading writers: all 50% off until August 28.
Ben Harker maps Williams’s developing positions on the relationship between culture, consciousness, class power, and socialist strategy.
Penelope J. Corfield writes about the intellectual development of her uncle Christopher Hill, one of the most influential writers on seventeenth century England and leading Marxist historian.