In exploring the question: "What do we mean by socialism?,” Hal Draper argues genuine liberation can be won only through self-emancipation.
This massive six volume set gathers together the most important spoken and written words of Debs for the first time, allowing a deeper understanding of radical political opposition in America during the first quarter of the twentieth century.
In this important volume, Redfern rigorously examines the relationship between British labour and British capital during the two world wars of the twentieth century.
Drawing on Hegel, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim, Mark Worrell re-examines the social ontology of "social facts' in the wake of the shift from bourgeois liberalism to global neoliberalism.
Everyone has read Lenin’s ?What is to Be Done.’ Now everyone can read the contributions of his political interlocutors.
Le Blanc presents a colorful, fact-filled history that concentrates on the struggles and achievements of the often neglected laboring majority.
Gracchus Babeuf has long been recognized as an important precursor of the revolutionary socialist tradition.
A guide to give newcomers the confidence to begin their own oral history projects.
They are a mass migration of thousands of young people from Central America, yet each one travels alone: solito, solita.
Poet Kevin Coval offers both tragedy and comedy in this stirring exposition on the Jewish American cultural experience.
Howard Zinn examines the politics of the South and his own experiences there.
From post-Katrina struggles to Muslim women refusing to unveil, the logic of a new generation of protest is emerging