Fra Socialist Review nr. 118 |
Forfatter: Titel |
Nr. |
Side |
Udgivet |
Om |
Chris Harman: Grounds for optimism (Afghanistan) |
118 |
11 |
mar 89 |
|
Russian withdrawal from Afghanistan has caused some confusion on the left. There is a tendency for people to see it simply as a victory for the Americans over the Russians. |
|
A class divided (Iran; interview Farhang Tabrizi) |
118 |
12 |
mar 89 |
|
Ayatollah Khomeini's call to Salman Rushdie highlights the pressures on the Iranian leader. As Iran comes to terms with the aftermath of the Gulf war a power struggle has developed inside the country. SWR talks to Farhang Tabrizi, an Iranian revolutionary, about the tensions inside Iran. |
|
Gareth Jenkins: The Devil's prose? (Salman Rushdie: "Satanic Verses") |
118 |
15 |
mar 89 |
|
Paul Foot: Can Labour win? |
118 |
16 |
mar 89 |
|
Can Kinnock copy Mitterand? |
|
Part of the tradition (interview with leading OSE members) |
118 |
20 |
mar 89 |
|
OSE recently voted to become part of the International Socialist Tendency |
|
Lesley Hoggart: Spirit of revolution (foundation of Comintern) |
118 |
22 |
mar 89 |
|
Seventy years ago this month revolutionaries from across Europe and America met to found the Communist International. They met as workers throughout Europe were rising in revolt. Lesley Hoggart looks back at this high point of international revolutionary organisation, and shows how their arguments over strategy and tactics provided essential weapons for socialists. |
|
Ian Birchall: 1789 – Culture and Revolution: 'One of us' (Balzac) |
118 |
26 |
mar 89 |
|