Hull House Songs, newly republished with a critical commentary, recovers the hidden emancipatory possibilities of the Hull-House women's legacy.
Bidet conducts an unprecedented investigation of Marx's work in the spirit of the history of science.
A unique, multidimensional view of the political imagination of the American worker during World War II.
In Eros and Revolution, Javier Castro presents a comprehensive intellectual and political biography of the world-renowned critical theorist Herbert Marcuse
Award-winning poet Kevin Coval and graphic artist Langston Allston bare witness to the effects of gentrification in a Chicago neighborhood.
Emancipation and History assesses critical theory today, focusing on the connection between history and emancipation and on the trends that structure modernity and may lead us beyond it.
The Russian Revolution turned the world upside down. This reader tells the story of what happened with riveting eyewitness accounts.
An in depth and personal look into the lives of four people wrongfully imprisoned for crimes they didn't commit.
An Oedipal drama for the ages, played out through philosophical polemics, with a twist that haunts history to this day.
An in depth and personal look into the lives of four people wrongfully imprisoned for crimes they didn't commit.
Staughton Lynd challenges academics to see American history through eyes of the poor and working class participants in history.
Usually viewed as a symbol of imperial might, Chaichian argues that Walls better fit as signs of an empire's decline.