Fra Socialist Review nr. 334 |
Forfatter: Titel |
Nr. |
Side |
Udgivet |
Om |
Socialist Review 334: Content |
334 |
3 |
mar 09 |
|
Noel Douglas: Book: David King: Red Star over Russia |
334 |
2 |
mar 09 |
|
“Red Star over Russia is a fast-forward visual history of the Soviet Union. It is a heavy bombardment of posters, photographs, graphics and text depicting the revolutionary upheavals of 1917, the Civil War that followed, the defeat of the Bolsheviks and their ideals in the wake of the catastrophic rise of Stalinism.”
So runs the beginning of Davis King’s introduction to this superb new book. |
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Editorial |
334 |
3 |
mar 09 |
|
Times of deep crisis shake society to its core. All assumptions and certainties of past years, and sometimes decades, can dissolve in days. The idea of nationalising banks is now common; house repossessions are predicted to rise to 75,000 this year; and job losses are spiralling. |
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Barry Pavier: Sri Lanka – the dead end of nationalism |
334 |
4 |
mar 09 |
|
The final stage of the Sri Lankan army's offensive to capture territory held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is approaching, with thousands of civilians being driven into an enclave on the north east coast. |
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Nick Clark: Freudian slips |
334 |
4 |
mar 09 |
|
The desertion of New Labour's welfare reform adviser Sir David Freud to the Tories highlighted how little there is to choose between the main parties' policies. |
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Patrick Ward: No change in Israel |
334 |
5 |
mar 09 |
|
The Israeli general election has resulted in Benjamin Netanyahu of the Likud Party being invited to form a new government. |
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Christophe Chataigné: Iceland and the saucepan revolution |
334 |
6 |
mar 09 |
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"We managed to topple the government using the best of non-violent protests, civil disobedience and political satire," – 24 year old receptionist Guðjón Heiðar Valgarðsson encapsulates what many of the protesters felt when on 26 January the then prime minister, Geir Hilmar Haarde, announced the resignation of his government. |
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Patrick Ward: Hate Mail |
334 |
7 |
mar 09 |
|
The fight by the Mail on Sunday (MoS) against extremism continues. |
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Patrick Ward: Scottish jobs for Scottish workers |
334 |
7 |
mar 09 |
|
"Use of foreign labour set to rise six-fold under SNP", shouts a press release from the Scottish Labour Party. |
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Lindsey German: In my opinion: The other occupation |
334 |
7 |
mar 09 |
|
Every mass campaign has its symbols. For me the most moving of the Gaza campaign were the dolls dressed in bloodstained baby clothes, carried by children or teenagers, brought up to the front of demos and cradled in people's arms. |
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Pete Wearden: Letters: Wallace and Darwin |
334 |
8 |
mar 09 |
|
In an excellent article on the development of the theory of natural selection and its social and political context, it was very welcome to see Alfred Russel Wallace given his due place (Socialist Review, February 2009). |
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Nick Grant: Letters: A class traitor? |
334 |
8 |
mar 09 |
|
I recently read Stephen Jay Gould's essay on "Natural Selection and the Human Brain", from his collection, The Panda's Thumb. |
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Phil Webster: Letters: Anti-slavery theory |
334 |
8 |
mar 09 |
|
In his review of Darwin's Sacred Cause, by Adrian Desmond and James Moore, Terry Sullivan (Books, Socialist Review, February 2009) gives some praise to the book, but ends by saying that it is not totally convincing. |
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Andrew Stone: Letters: Not that long coming |
334 |
8 |
mar 09 |
|
I am puzzled by Millie Fry's statement that in 1964 "the civil rights movement had yet to explode onto the scene" (Culture, Socialist Review, February 2009). The Civil Rights Act signed that year by Lyndon Johnson was one index of a long, hard-fought struggle. |
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GM Tamás: Letter from ...: Hungary |
334 |
9 |
mar 09 |
|
The economic crisis has led to politicians blaming the poorest for society's problems, and the rise of the far right. |
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Martin Smith: Economic crisis and job losses: Who's to blame? |
334 |
10 |
mar 09 |
|
Nationalism is always a dead end for the working class movement, argues Martin Smith, after the wildcat strikes that demanded "British jobs for British workers" |
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Robert Jackson: Agreements under threat |
334 |
13 |
mar 09 |
|
There are 267 different firms employed at Lindsey oil refinery alone. Is European law keeping bosses in line with national agreements on pay and conditions? |
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Hsiao-Hung Pai: Lindsey Oil: Views from the migrant workers |
334 |
14 |
mar 09 |
|
Francesco and Gianluca, like their 98 Italian colleagues housed on a barge at Grimsby Fish Docks, had arrived in late January on a four-month contract to work at the French oil giant, Total, at Lindsey oil refinery in Immingham. |
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Judith Orr: Lehman Sisters? |
334 |
15 |
mar 09 |
|
A steady stream of recent articles blames "macho behaviour" for the financial crisis. Judith Orr challenges the assumption that women would do it better. |
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Donie Fell: Union-made: Crystal clear intentions (Waterford Crystal occupation) |
334 |
17 |
mar 09 |
|
We're in occupation to stop our factory from being shut down. The glass industry in Waterford is making a profit but not enough to satisfy corporate greed. |
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Judith Orr + Sabby Sagall: Interview: Playing a part against injustice |
334 |
18 |
mar 09 |
|
Oscar winning actor Julie Christie talks to Sabby Sagall and Judith Orr about her work and political commitment and how she feels about the media treatment of women in the public eye in the age of celebrity culture. |
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Chris Harman: In perspective: Slump, boom and climate change |
334 |
21 |
mar 09 |
|
From the European Union to Barack Obama, promises have been made to give priority to a "green agenda". In reality, they are using the recession to go into reverse. |
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Jim Wolfreys: New party to unite the French left |
334 |
23 |
mar 09 |
|
The birth of the New Anti-capitalist Party in France is a welcome development for those opposed to neoliberalism. Over 9,000 people from different political backgrounds have already joined up. Jim Wolfreys reports from its founding congress and looks at its prospects and challenges. |
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Ian Birchall: A to Z of Socialism: U is for united front |
334 |
24 |
mar 09 |
|
In 1919 the Communist International was born. Throughout Europe and beyond new Communist Parties were founded, generally by splits in mass reformist parties. As anyone who has been through a split knows, the process left behind enormous political and personal bitterness. Yet within a couple of years the Communist International was urging its members to form united fronts with the reformist parties. |
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Jonathan Neale: Book Review: Round-up on Afghanistan |
334 |
25 |
mar 09 |
|
The Afghan resistance is spreading and winning. The resistance has largely cut off the Khyber Pass, the main road from Pakistan, and has effective control of half the country. |
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Mike Gonzalez: Book Review: Roberto Bolaño: 2666 |
334 |
26 |
mar 09 |
|
This is a bewildering book. Like its predecessor, The Savage Detectives, it is an exhausting journey backwards and forwards across the globe, in and out of bars and brothels, leaping from culture to culture. |
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Joseph Choonara: Book Review: John Bellamy Foster and Fred Magdoff: The Great Financial Crisis |
334 |
26 |
mar 09 |
|
Monthly Review (MR) has been a leading journal of the US left since 1949. In its pages writers such as Paul Baran, Paul Sweezy and Harry Magdoff set out a distinct analysis of capitalism as it existed after the Second World War. This short book collects several recent MR essays by John Bellamy Foster and Fred Magdoff, along with two original chapters, that continue this task – with particular reference to the current economic crisis. |
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Mike Simons: Book Review: Francis Beckett and David Henke: Marching to the Fault Line |
334 |
27 |
mar 09 |
|
Marching to the Fault Line is a fascinating, if flawed, account of the great miners' strike of 1984-85. Francis Beckett and David Henke have unearthed important government material from the strike, and had access to the diaries and memories of a range of senior Labour Party and trade union figures for the book. |
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Charlotte Bence: Book Review: Hans Fallada: Alone In Berlin |
334 |
27 |
mar 09 |
|
If standards on this magazine were not, thankfully, significantly higher, this review would merely be a gushing appeal to all readers to read this book as soon as it comes out, pass it on and tell everyone you know to do the same. |
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Anindya Bhattacharyya: Book Review: Alain Badiou: The Meaning of Sarkozy |
334 |
28 |
mar 09 |
|
Philosophers, it is well known, only interpret the world, when the point is to change it. France's Alain Badiou is a rare exception to this rule – a philosopher who tries to do both. Published in France in 2007, this book was conceived as a polemical response to the election of Nicolas Sarkozy as the country's president in May that year. It proved to be a surprise hit. |
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Peter Dwyer: Book Review: The Bases of Empire |
334 |
29 |
mar 09 |
|
This book details how military bases, the springboard for US militarism, have changed continuously throughout history in relation to the needs of imperialism and the resistance to it. |
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Judith Orr: Book Review: Nechama Tec: Defiance |
334 |
29 |
mar 09 |
|
This is the book on which the recent movie of the same name was based. Like the film it has its weaknesses. But the film helped reveal this extraordinary story of a group of Jewish partisans who defied the Nazis and survived deep in the forest of Western Belorussia during the Second World War. |
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New in paperback & children's books |
334 |
29 |
mar 09 |
|
Segregation – Failed Gods – White Tiger – Secret Diary |
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John Molyneux: Culture Column: Mark Wallinger's horse of another colour |
334 |
30 |
mar 09 |
|
The selection of Mark Wallinger's proposal for a giant white horse for Ebbsfleet international station in Kent is an event of some cultural significance. |
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Tom Behan: Film Review: Il Divo (Dir.: Paolo Sorrentino) |
334 |
31 |
mar 09 |
|
This is an Italian film about an Italian politician, Giulio Andreotti, and as such risks travelling badly – which would be a shame. |
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Louis Bayman: Film Review: Wendy and Lucy (Dir.: Kelly Reichardt) |
334 |
31 |
mar 09 |
|
Or "One Woman and her Dog", as this film could alternatively be called. The title refers to the one loving relationship in the industrially depressed Oregon in which Wendy and her canine companion Lucy are stuck for the length of this film. |
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Jess Edwards: Film Review: The Class (Dir.: Laurent Cantet) |
334 |
31 |
mar 09 |
|
The Class is about a class of teenage students and their teacher in a French school. Through the interaction of the students with their teacher, Francois Marin, the film explores many aspects of the French education system. |
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Eamonn Kelly: DVD Review: The End of America (Dir.: Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg) |
334 |
32 |
mar 09 |
|
The End of America is based on a Naomi Wolf lecture, intercut with interviews and news reports, rooted on Wolf's recent pamphlet warning of the erosion of civil liberties in contemporary US. |
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Andrew Stone: Theatre Review: The Pitmen Painters (Dir.: Max Roberts) |
334 |
33 |
mar 09 |
|
This funny, warm and thought-provoking play tells the true story of a group of Ashington miners who went to an art appreciation course run by the Workers' Educational Association (WEA) and became renowned painters. |
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Five things to get or see this month |
334 |
33 |
mar 09 |
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365 – The Hounding of Davis Oluwale – Hunger – Picasso: Challenging the Past – FTA |
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Gareth Jenkins: Obiturary: Edward Upward (1903-2009) |
334 |
34 |
mar 09 |
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Edward Upward, the last of the 1930s generation of left-wing British writers, has died at the age of 105. It is astonishing to think that someone who was in his late 20s when the Wall Street Crash heralded the Great Depression should live on to see an equally deep crisis begin to convulse the system once again. |
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Eileen Short + Tim Sanders + Keith Flett: Cartoon: A People's History of the World. 21: Christianity |
334 |
35 |
mar 09 |
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