If any kind of “political revolution” is to continue, the choice on November 8 could not be clearer.
In the early days, the Maidan protests had been something like a people’s national liberation festival. But by 2014, with war erupting in the east, euphoria and solidarity had been replaced by grief and anger.
In an interview, Nancy Fraser contends with liberal feminism’s troubling convergence with contemporary capitalism, and offers a radically different vision of gender justice.
Jane McAlevey joins us to talk about her new book, No Shortcuts, strategies for workplace organizing, and what’s wrong with Saul Alinsky.
An interview with Matthew Karp about his book, This Vast Southern Empire, and the international politics of American slavery.
The resurgence of ugly, authoritarian nationalism has renewed a strain of anti-democratic commentary among allegedly enlightened intellectuals. But this retreat to elitism will only empower the demagogues.
A leader in a movement that was already ambivalent about leadership, Tom Hayden was incandescent—all intensity, all intelligence, full of a righteous indignation that I shared.
A new digital archive reveals the extent of the federal government’s role in fueling and enforcing midcentury housing discrimination.
Rolling back Republican domination in the states will not be easy. But it is a battle that must be joined.
Joshua Bennett talks about writing poetry after Ferguson.