Fra International Socialism Journal nr. 110 |
Forfatter: Titel |
Nr. |
Side |
Udgivet |
Om |
Contents (ISJ 110, Spring 2006) |
110 |
1 |
mar 06 |
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Notes on contributors |
110 |
2 |
mar 06 |
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Chris Harman: Analysis: the faultlines grow deeper |
110 |
3 |
mar 06 |
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We have analysed three faultlines in the world system in recent issues of this journal—the morass in which the US finds itself in Iraq, the wave of insurgency sweeping South America and the resistance to attempts to push through neo-liberal policies in Europe. All three are deepening. |
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Yuri Prasad: Nepal on the brink |
110 |
20 |
mar 06 |
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For the last ten years the Himalayan kingdom of Nepal has been in the grip of a civil war, with the king and his Royal Nepalese Army (RNA) on one side, and the Communist Party of Nepal—Maoist (CPN-M) and their People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on the other. |
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Roland Denis: Venezuela: the popular movement and the government |
110 |
29 |
mar 06 |
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Roland Denis is active in the Venezuelan Movement of 13 April. Chris Harman and Maina van der Zwan interviewed him in Caracas at the end of January 2006.1 We began by asking him about the development of the movement at the base of society. |
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Dave Crouch: The Bolsheviks and Islam |
110 |
37 |
mar 06 |
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Missing from much of the discussion about socialists and Islam is an appreciation of how Lenin’s Bolsheviks made their revolution after 1917 among the peoples of the former Russian Empire, where 10 percent of the population—some 16 million people—were Muslims. |
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Gareth Jenkins: Marxism and terrorism |
110 |
61 |
mar 06 |
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‘Terrorism’ is the new global threat against which global war must now be fought, according to ruling class politicians and the media. This affects sections of the left. Those who showed sympathy to organisations (such as the Provisional IRA) using ‘terrorist’ methods in the 1970s now all too often take a completely opposite view of today’s ‘terrorism’. |
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Neil Davidson: Enlightenment and anti-capitalism |
110 |
85 |
mar 06 |
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The Enlightenment was an intellectual and social movement which, like the Renaissance and the Reformation before it, characterised a specific historical period. Yet it remains at the heart of current concerns in a way that, for example, Reformation debates over predestination do not. The Enlightenment remains a contemporary issue and not merely a historical one. |
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Geoff Brown: Pakistan: on the edge of instability |
110 |
113 |
mar 06 |
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As George W Bush weighs up the odds of military action against Iran, one factor his administration will be taking into consideration is instability in Pakistan. This longtime US client state lies at one end of the arc of instability caused by the US’s occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. |
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Charlie Hore: Mao out of context |
110 |
135 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Jung Chang and Jon Halliday, Mao: The Untold Story (Jonathan Cape, 2005), £25.
Chang and Halliday set out their agenda from the book’s opening words: ‘Mao Zedong, who for decades held absolute power over one quarter of the world’s population, was responsible for well over 70 million deaths in peacetime, more than any other 20th century leader’ (p3). |
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Pete Glatter: The light that hasn’t failed |
110 |
153 |
mar 06 |
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Kevin Murphy’s book "Revolution and Counterrevolution: Class Struggle in a Moscow Metal Factory" is a landmark in the study of Soviet history. The book is a stark challenge to the conventional idea that ‘Lenin led to Stalin’—ie, that Stalinism arose on the basis of the 1917 Revolution instead of in opposition to it. Kevin discussed the issues raised by his book, which won the 2005 Deutscher Memorial prize, with Pete Glatter. |
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Michael Eaude: The anger and ethics of Manuel Vázquez Montalbán |
110 |
167 |
mar 06 |
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Manuel Vázquez Montalbán (1939-2003) was one of the last of the engagé writers of Southern Europe, left wing intellectuals produced by the large Communist parties of the 1960s and 1970s. Prolific journalist, essayist and novelist, he was an outstanding interpreter of Spain in its transformation from the sad, frightened country of the Franco dictatorship to its limited, but vibrant, bourgeois democracy today. |
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Mike Haynes: Where it came from |
110 |
173 |
mar 06 |
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David Harvey, A Brief History of Neo-Liberalism (Oxford University Press, 2005), £14.99 |
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Chris Wickham: Structures and agencies |
110 |
176 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Alex Callinicos: "Making History: Agency, Structure, and Change in Social Theory" (Brill, Historical Materialism book series, 2004), euro 52. |
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Sue Sparks: Actually existing capitalism |
110 |
180 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Martin Hart-Landsberg and Paul Burkett: "China and Socialism: Market Reforms and Class Struggle" (Monthly Review Press, 2005), £13.99 |
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Owen Miller: The haunted battlefield |
110 |
183 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Hwang Sok-yong, The Guest (Seven Stories Press, 2005), $27.95.
Korean writer Hwang Sok-yong’s recently translated novel The Guest concerns the Korean War (1950-53), one of the 20th century’s less remembered wars. The narrative is also a dizzying kaleidoscope of Korea’s modern history. |
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Simon Basketter: What Marx really said |
110 |
186 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Hal Draper and E Haberkern, Karl Marx’s Theory of Revolution Volume V: War and Revolution (Monthly Review Press, 2005), $17.99. |
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Talat Ahmed: Beyond the Subalterns |
110 |
189 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Tithi Bhattacharya: "The Sentinels of Culture: Class, Education and the Colonial Intellectual in Bengal" (Oxford University Press, 2005). |
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Graham Mustin: Hunting the heretics |
110 |
192 |
mar 06 |
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A review of Elaine Graham-Leigh: "The Southern French Nobility and the Albigensian Crusade" (Boydell Press, 2005), £50 |
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Chris Harman: Pick of the quarter |
110 |
194 |
mar 06 |
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A regular survey of articles which readers will find useful. Some, although by no means all, are available on the web. |
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Alex Callinicos: Feedback: Making sense of imperialism: a reply to Leo Panitch and Sam Gindin |
110 |
196 |
mar 06 |
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A Callinicos: "Imperialism and Global Political Economy", International Socialism 108 (Autumn 2005); L Panitch and S Gindin, "“Imperialism and Global Political Economy”—A Reply to Alex Callinicos", International Socialism 109 (Winter 2006). |
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