Fra Socialist Review nr. 308 |
Forfatter: Titel |
Nr. |
Side |
Udgivet |
Om |
Contents |
308 |
3 |
jul 06 |
|
Noel Douglas: Time for a commercial break |
308 |
2 |
jul 06 |
|
Have you found that while waiting for the 73 bus you hear voices? Or have you come away from the stop for 149 smelling of the latest fragrance from Givency? |
|
Mark Steel: When Getting it Wrong is Part of the Job Description |
308 |
4 |
jul 06 |
|
Who'd have thought the day would come when the police spoke with affection about the IRA? |
|
Rob Hoveman: Andrew Glyn: 'Will we face a dystopia in which very large numbers of less qualified and poorly paid people exist to service the consumption needs of the rich?' |
308 |
6 |
jul 06 |
|
Andrew Glyn has been a prominent left wing economist for more than 35 years. He talks to Rob Hoveman about his latest book Capitalism Unleashed. |
|
Alex Callinicos: Alternatives to Neo-liberalism |
308 |
10 |
jul 06 |
|
Advocates of the free market constantly repeat the refrain that 'there is no alternative'. Alex Callinicos believes that for the movement to be able to answer this claim, it needs to reassert the viability of democratic planning. |
|
Lindsey German: In My Opinion: Danger to World Peace |
308 |
15 |
jul 06 |
|
Why is it a surprise to anyone that the public fear real wars more than the hypothetical possibility of attack? |
|
Claire Ceruti: South Africa: Communists and ANC to Split? |
308 |
16 |
jul 06 |
|
This is not the first time South African newspapers have announced a serious rift between the African National Congress (ANC), the South African Communist Party (CP) and the trade union federation Cosatu. What's fresh this time around is that the union and Communist leaders are no longer denying it. |
|
Vidya Sagar: India: Suicide and the 'Art of Living' |
308 |
17 |
jul 06 |
|
Death is stalking the farmers of the Indian states of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, where more than 14,000 people have committed suicide between 2001 and 2006. |
|
John Crabtree: Peru: Second Chance President |
308 |
18 |
jul 06 |
|
Peru's president elect, Alan Garcia, promises to be rather different to the Alan Garcia who became president in 1985. |
|
Anne Ashford: Iraq: Filmmaking under occupation |
308 |
19 |
jul 06 |
|
Maysoon Pachachi interview |
|
Beccy James: Mental Health: Much More Than a 'State of Mind' |
308 |
20 |
jul 06 |
|
Last month the British Medical Association (BMA) released a shocking report which found that as many as one in ten children and young people between the ages of one and 16 are suffering from a serious mental health problem. |
|
Michael Lavalette: Tour de France: Chain Gang Convicts of the Road |
308 |
21 |
jul 06 |
|
July sees the annual highlight of the cycling road-race calendar – the Tour de France. |
|
James Dunkerley: Book Review: The Enduring Spell of Bolivar |
308 |
22 |
jul 06 |
|
James Dunkerley is impressed by a new biography of the Latin American freedom fighter.
Simon Bolivar by John Lynch is published by Yale University Press, £25 |
|
Sally Campbell: Book Review: Cracks in the System |
308 |
24 |
jul 06 |
|
Sally Campbell spoke to John Rees about the growing weaknesses in the imperialist project, and how they might be exploited by the anti-war movement.
John Rees: Imperialism and Resistance, Routledge. |
|
Simon Assaf: Book Review: Wrong War |
308 |
26 |
jul 06 |
|
'God's Terrorists', Charles Allen, Little, Brown £20
Allen is rewriting history to fit modern prejudice. And in doing so, he has debased and compromised both himself, and his work–shearing away any historical insights and reducing India and Afghanistan's histories to a racist stereotype. |
|
Jane Coles: Book Review: Testing Times |
308 |
26 |
jul 06 |
|
'Another School is Possible', Terry Wrigley, Bookmarks £9.99 |
|
Chris Nineham: Book Review: Future Perfect? |
308 |
27 |
jul 06 |
|
'Realizing Hope', Michael Albert, Zed Books £14.99
In this new book Michael Albert develops his ideas about what a liberated "good" society might look like, outlined previously in his book Parecon (short for "participatory economics"). This time he moves beyond economics to speculate about wide areas of everyday life. He goes deeper into the first principles of his thinking. |
|
Viv Smith: Book Review: Finding Roots |
308 |
27 |
jul 06 |
|
'Playing In The Light', Zoë Wicomb, The New Press £14.99
There have been many novels written about post-apartheid South Africa but few manage to tackle the question of race and class as well as Zoë Wicomb has done here. |
|
Peyman Jafari: Book Review: Beneath the Lies |
308 |
28 |
jul 06 |
|
'Iran Today', Dilip Hiro, Politico's £9.99
For those of us who are terrified by the prospect of a new war that would turn Iran into another Iraq, this book is a refreshing antidote to the simplistic view of Iranian politics and society pictured in the mainstream. |
|
Ben Dickenson: Book Review: Original Directors |
308 |
28 |
jul 06 |
|
'The Sundance Kids: How the Mavericks Took Back Hollywood ', James Mottram, Faber and Faber £16.99 |
|
Jim Wolfreys: DVD Review: Guilty secret |
308 |
29 |
jul 06 |
|
Hidden. Director: Michael Haneke |
|
Shahnaz Taylor: Film Review: Politics Show |
308 |
29 |
jul 06 |
|
Viva Zapatero! Dir.: Sabina Guzzanti
This documentary has little to do with the Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, rather it is an attack on censorship in general, and the former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi in particular. |
|
Noel Halifax: Out of the Closet |
308 |
30 |
jul 06 |
|
Pop music historian Jon Savage spoke to Noel Halifax about his new collection of gay pop music from the 1960s to the 1980s.
Jon Savage: From the Closet to the Charts–Queer Noises 1961-1978, Trikont records |
|
Richard Seymour: Comment: The Brutalisation of the Working Class |
308 |
31 |
jul 06 |
|
Dave Treece's excellent article on Brazil (June SR) highlights a crucial part of the story of global capitalism. US activist and writer Mike Davis has recently highlighted demographic reports suggesting that the bulk of the world's new population will emerge in slums in the Global South. |
|
Charles Markham: Comment: Missing Shots |
308 |
31 |
jul 06 |
|
I think Stephen Philip's piece on the Communist influence on cinema misses one element (June SR). |
|
Correction |
308 |
31 |
jul 06 |
|
We apalogise for the missing lines on Lindsey German’s column (June SR). The last paragraph should have read:
“In my opinion, the only other male playwright who does this is Bertolt Brecht. In a way that Shakespeare, as a product of his time, could not and did not, both Ibsen and Brecht show what is wrong with capitalism by highlighting its injustices to women, and so help us understand the world in order to change it.” |
|
Chris Harman: Last word: The Ruling Class, its Police and the Left |
308 |
32 |
jul 06 |
|
One of the most disgusting spectacles last month was that of Ken Livingstone defending Ian Blair, head of the Metropolitan Police, after his force shot the second innocent person in 11 months. |
|