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Re: Why Won’t the US’s Largest Labor Federation Talk About a General Strike?
Michael Meeropol
The nfl! If nba stars call for a sports strike
On Fri, Sep 25, 2020 at 6:11 AM Jerry Monaco <monacojerry@...> wrote:
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Re: Review of *Marxist Literary Criticism Today* by Barbara Foley | James Smethurst | Science & Society
Jerry Monaco
Thank you for this. I hope I have time to read the book. I remember reading Raymond Wiliams when I was 19 and he taught me new ways to think about literature.
On Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 7:12 PM Kevin Lindemann and Cathy Campo <kklcac@...> wrote:
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A new survey says white support for Black Lives Matter has slipped
Jerry Monaco
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/09/24/metro/new-survey-says-white-support-black-lives-matter-has-slipped-some-historians-say-theyre-not-surprised/ Yes, not surprising. But one of the reasons is that without working-class, grassroots, and Black membership institutions of mobilization, education, and advocacy the occasion for demonstration and protest will pass and people will be left unorganized. Such institutions could be a party, a labor union, or and educational group, but they need to exist in order to grow. Protests are not enough.
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Re: Why Won’t the US’s Largest Labor Federation Talk About a General Strike?
Jerry Monaco
A few strategic strikes would work wonders --- airline flight attendants, teachers, meat packing plants --- amazon workers --- All you need are transport workers - longshoremen, railroad workers, truckers. Easier said than done of course. On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 10:11 AM Michael Meeropol <mameerop@...> wrote:
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Re: Subverting Mao: The Roots of Minjian Activism in China - Los Angeles Review of Books
Jerry Monaco
Why should a leftist or radical read this? I read it through and it is uninformative, full of middle class assumptions about "democracy advocates," and is basically representative of the usual kind of cliche of thoughts. Every reference to "democracy advocates" in the article should be relabled "blackbox advocates" because I have yet to read in the Western press about anybody who actually advocates "democracy." What such advocates actually advocate is not reported in detail in this article or in many others. Some of these people might be fighting for good things, and might be fighting for something they call "democracy" but what our middle-class writers call democracy is rarely democratic. In general, we learn as much about the democracy that the "democracy advocates" fight for as we learn about what U.S. anti-Trump liberals mean when they continually say "our democracy" is under threat. I have not idea what these liberals mean by democracy and I have no idea what the writer of this article means by "democracy advocate." It is just the usual kind of thinking without meaning. The paragraphs about legal history could be interesting if expanded. The legal history of China since 1948 is ignored in the popular press. In general the details of Chinese Communist Party governance is ignored. In general the admistrative history of present day China is rarely written about except as horror stories. Of course, we should know about the horror stories, but horror stories alone tell very little about Chinese governance or the attitudes of the various classes of Chinese people in the many regions of China. There are some interesting incidents reported in the article but not enough to make the article worth reading. My Chinese friends tell me much more in a few minutes than I learned in this article.
On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 9:23 AM Louis Proyect <lnp3@...> wrote: https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/subverting-mao-the-roots-of-minjian-activism-in-china/
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Re: Ginsburg dies: What comes next?
Jerry Monaco
Liberals care too much about the Supreme Court. It matters but the history of Supreme Court is a history of pro-buisinesss, reaction and racism. This has been true except for a brief few decades when Roosevelt and Eisenhower appointed liberal-left justices. Hate the ruling class? Then hate it's supreme court.
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Re: From one current in the resistance
Dayne Goodwin
international solidarity! btw, the German counterpart of (U.S.) AFL president Samuel Gompers, Carl Legien (chairman of the General German Trade Union Federation) led the General Strike that defeated the March 1920 Kapp Putsch. Legien: "He countered the right-wing Kapp Putsch of March 1920 by organizing a massive general strike in Germany with about 12 million employees following the joint call of the legal government and the unions. The strike immediately halted all production, transportation, mining and public services, it was "the strongest mass movement the German proletariat ever created" and "gave the Kapp régime its death blow".https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Legien
On Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 10:41 PM Ken Hiebert <knhiebert@...> wrote:
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EU schlägt wegen Infektionszahlen Alarm
R.O.
(Second corona wave in EU has begun)
EU schlägt wegen Infektionszahlen AlarmKommissarin: Entscheidender Moment / Strengere Regeln für private Feiern in NRWT.G./ahan. BRÜSSEL/FRANKFURT. Die EU-Kommission hat am Donnerstag wegen der stark steigenden Infektionen mit dem Coronavirus Alarm geschlagen. „In einigen Mitgliedstaaten ist die Lage jetzt sogar schlimmer als während des Höhepunkts im März“, sagte Gesundheitskommissarin Stella Kyriakides. Sie warnte vor einer „tödlichen doppelten Pandemie“wegen der nun ebenfalls beginnenden Grippesaison, welche die Gesundheitssysteme überlasten könnte. „Alle Mitgliedstaaten müssen sofort Gegenmaßnahmen ergreifen, und zwar beim ersten Anzeichen neuer möglicher Ausbrüche.“Die Kommissarin sprach von einem „entscheidenden Moment“: „Es könnte unsere letzte Chance sein, eine Wiederholung des vergangenen Frühjahrs zu verhindern.“
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From one current in the resistance
Ken Hiebert
10 things you need to know to stop a coup
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H-Net Review [H-Buddhism]: Taylor on Veidlinger, 'From Indra's Net to Internet: Communication, Technology, and the Evolution of Buddhist Ideas'
Andrew Stewart
---------- Forwarded message --------- From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <h-review@...> Date: Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 7:23 PM Subject: H-Net Review [H-Buddhism]: Taylor on Veidlinger, 'From Indra's Net to Internet: Communication, Technology, and the Evolution of Buddhist Ideas' To: <h-review@...> Cc: H-Net Staff <revhelp@...> Daniel Veidlinger. From Indra's Net to Internet: Communication, Technology, and the Evolution of Buddhist Ideas. Contemporary Buddhism Series. Honolulu University of Hawai'i Press, 2018. 284 pp. $68.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8248-7340-0. Reviewed by James Taylor (The University of Adelaide) Published on H-Buddhism (September, 2020) Commissioned by Ben Van Overmeire Indra's Net is a metaphor for the reflective cosmological view that permeates the Hindu-Brahmanical world, symbolizing the universe as a web of transient connections and interdependencies. This conception was eventually absorbed into the early Mahayana philosophy. Essentially this book discusses the nature of online Buddhism and its evolution in terms of the transmission of meanings and practices through various communication networks over time. In the present time, the author tells us, the "Buddha's concern with propagating his (doctrinal) message lives on in the wired world" (p. 4). The book then discusses issues pertinent and apropos to the late modern world as practicing Buddhists (in diverse Buddhist cultural systems) confront a new lived space. In this changing milieu, cyber-Buddhism (with various Buddhist internet sites) has emerged since the 1990s as a response to the needs of an increasingly mobile and fragmented transnational (mostly urban) new social order. Arising from the experiences with modernity are new spatial possibilities engendered in large part by these hypertechnologies, especially the internet; digitalization potentially and markedly transforms religious space. The book is a contribution to the realization of the transformative possibilities embedded in a postmodern digital religion following the trajectories of the ancient communicative systems. It extends these early philosophical traditions into a new world of communication via electronic space. In general, it must be stated that the book is not new in its thematic coverage of cyber-Buddhism and the new (virtual) religious technologies of communication. The book though is intriguing in its use of identifying historical links to a new digital future. It is nevertheless rather fragmented in its argumentation and weakly supported by somewhat scattered use of theory. It nevertheless succeeds at another level as thought provoking, if somewhat speculative. Unfortunately, the work either is oblivious to or consciously omits other related thematic sources. As an example, one wonders why the author overlooked my earlier work on cyber-Buddhism.[1] This includes a not dissimilar consideration in regard to the way new electronic space/communications (in a postmodern urban milieu) has influenced the religious landscape and in the way we now perceive normative articulations of religious practice. Neither does the author make reference to my 2008 Buddhism and Postmodern Imaginings in Thailand (especially chapter 4), as it looks at a new (virtual) religiosity (especially chapters 5 and 6) regarding digital Buddhism, the changing nature of religiosity (how devotees interpret meaning and practice in their religion), and the increased reliance on an electronic (communicative) space through the use of the internet. Perhaps not surprisingly (as Daniel Veidlinger has worked with Gregory Grieve), Grieve's work is well cited, though not his new work, _Cyber Zen: Imagining Authentic Buddhist Identity, Community and Practices in the Virtual World_ (2016). But in discussing virtual (social) space and the implications for digital religion, the author should have referred to the pioneering work on virtuality (and the new possibilities of net life) in the 1990s by sociologists and cultural theorists, such as Rob Shields's edited collection _Cultures of the Internet, Virtual Spaces, Real Histories, Living Bodies_; the collection by Mike Featherstone and Roger Burrows, _Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk: Cultures of Technological Embodiment_, especially chapters by Mark Poster and Kevin Robins; and work by Mark Nunes (his article "Jean Baudrillard in Cyberspace" and his new book, _Cyberspaces of Everyday Life_).[2] Indeed, we are at a time of importance in technological history, which arguably may be compared to the watershed emergence of an urban-centered merchant culture in tribal societies at the time of the Buddha (discussed in chapter 3 of Veidlinger's book). It may be appropriate then to consider a new Jaspersian Axial Age where personalized transcendence and experience through the medium of new optical technologies replaces traditional embodied religious communities with online (web) communities. The discussion in chapter 2 on the Axial Age, given that the book is "suggestive," could have taken this imagining a lot further than (an interesting) historical narrative (p. 229). Veidlinger's argument also needs to be framed in relation to textual Buddhism (orthopraxy and orthodoxy), as virtual/cyber communication challenges how we think, feel, and act on being religious. There is a broader ethnographic context missing in the book that needs to consider changes occurring in everyday practices (symbolism, meaning, and rituals). The net in fact produces multiple orderings of time and space that transcend online/offline boundaries (see the work of Christine Hine, _Virtual Ethnography_ [2000]). It is not enough to say that this communicative environment has the ability to shape ideas and the nature of the "self" (in a Buddhist sense) without considering how this is articulated on the ground and evidenced in social practice (p. 226). In a postmodern argument we can say that the Buddha, metaphorically speaking, is in the arcades and the shopping malls ("dreamscapes"), and in cyberspace as well as traditional centers of religious learning, village temples, frontier forest hermitages, etc. The author states (using a comparison to biological evolution) how the environment is a determinative process that we see occurring in the technological world as well; and of course there is ample evidence that technology has an effect on the way we perceive the world (that is, how we understand conventional reality). What should be taken into account here is the notion that Buddhism (as with other world religions) and religious change more generally could be seen as biosocial adaptations to changing environments (see Stephen Sanderson's _Religious Evolution and the Axial Age: From Shamans to Priests to Prophets_ [2018], though published too late for consideration by the author under review). It is simply incorrect at one level to say that village or rural Buddhism in Theravada countries had little connection to the outside world until more recent innovations in telecommunications and to imply in general that the "rural environment" encumbers social relations with the world outside (p. 221). Theravadin villages in Southeast Asia have of course long been influenced by external agents and have undergone internal transformations through their mobile interactions with the outside world (Mon-Khmer, Tibeto-Burmese, Sinhalese, etc.), as Stanley Tambiah had earlier noted in his "caravans of history" in his book _Buddhism and the Spirit Cults in North-east Thailand_ (1970), cited by Veidlinger. But if we compare changes to urban political and ritual centers then we can make this distinction. Indeed, communicative networks (especially early modern systems, railways, printing, etc. brought about through influences of colonialism since the late nineteenth century) may have been limiting cultural change, but these did not create impermeable communities. This is why anthropologists (since Thomas Kirsch in 1977) have explained endogenous Buddhism/s as syncretic, consisting of interactive religious strands.[3] Perceiving Buddhism as ossified or impervious neglects the transformations as well as the transmissions by nomadic/missionary monks through various "way stations" (for example, Sinhalese Buddhism and Mon in Burma) and in the manner of regional dispersed segmented pupillages--a picture that is part of the mobile preteritic vitality of Theravada Buddhism. Here I can only speak of the "southern school" of Buddhism. However, what has occurred in late modern times is the speed of these interactions and social and cultural changes and in religiosity brought about by new electronic or virtual communications as articulated by such thinkers as Paul Virilio and more recently Thomas Sutherland in relation to spatial ecologies, speed-space, or time-space compression.[4] Indeed, though not considered in the book, this would be useful in a discussion of late modern hyper-communications to underpin the author's argument. But to be fair, the author never claims to take a late or postmodern position in his analysis except in a fleeting reference to the present "postmodern era" and a mention of Jean-François Lyotard in relation to advances in communication and information technologies (pp. 146-47, 195). Ancient capitalism is discussed in the book (chapters 1 and 4, mentioning early trade routes, religious crossovers, the fifth century BC, and the rise of an Indic entrepreneur urban-dwelling class) but not taken further in the discussion of late modern capitalism and implications for new communications theory. It may have been useful to consider how this is articulated within a Marxist logic (as in David Harvey's _The Condition of Postmodernity_ [1989]). Veidlinger notes that as people become ever more digitally connected across the world (especially through the use of new fiber optics) "delivering messages at light speed" that "we can expect a radical shift in perspective amongst those who have access to this network" (p. 31). Speed (as mentioned above) is connected to time, the latter something the late modern cyber-Buddhist devotee has less and less of. Although not pursued, this argument to online access implies local/global inequalities in an information and communications network dominated by the reach and influence of global capital that privileges some classes (and nations) but not others and even allows authoritarian leaders to control information and pursue propaganda and misinformation. However, as in Thailand and other heavily regulated countries, people now have access to various alternative counter-statist electronic social media and are able to get around single gateways as in the use of a live OS that can be installed onto a USB drive to mask the host system information from both the ISPs and the websites. (These are systems that one can plug into any computer and boot as if it is an alternative operating system without damaging or changing the machine. It is alleged that none of the activity will be logged on the machine because it will bypass everything, except of course for RAM.) Cyberspace is potentially also then a (third) space of resistance. At the same time, relevant to this discussion, digital space also opens up the possibilities for the emergence of varieties of new Buddhism/s that may contest normative (place-based) religion. The Buddhist notion of "selflessness" (chapter 6) is not just that there is no organic or psychological (ultimate) "self" (Atta) as Veidlinger notes but also that we should not become fixated on this notion of self/identity, which leads to the substantiated delusion of ownership or self-importance (pp. 180-81). There is a "one who knows" (citta) and a recognition of the truths of the human condition. Insight practice is to understand the changeability and ultimate emptiness of the _khandhas_, the five elements that constitute the totality of an individual's mental and physical existence. This all raises the question of how computer-mediated communication can enable the practitioner to become a "stream enterer" (Sotāpanna) and achieve the ultimate fruition and results of normative Buddhist practice. We also need to keep in mind that there is not just one Buddhism but many Buddhisms, as the author includes in the book on his discussion on various vinayas, national Buddhism/s, and practices. Trevor Ling first referred to "Buddhisms," in _Buddhist Trends in Southeast Asia_ (1993), as a means to express the plurality and diversity of (Buddhist) religio-cultural forms within national contexts. Indeed, the emergence of cyber-Buddhism in the twenty-first century is one such reflection of a felt need in the late modern world, where devotees normally spend most of their time online. Tom Boellstorff's book, _Coming of Age in Second Life: An Anthropologist Explores the Virtually Human_ (2015) (especially pertinent is his chapter 5 on "self" and "personhood"), is a brilliant ethnographic analysis that would have nicely complemented the brief reference made to this virtual world in regard to Buddhist impermanence and to Buddhists engaged in it. Boellstorff notes the dilemma among some of his informants as they come to terms with their virtual and actual selfhoods. As contemporary societies become more interconnected and intensified through globalization, Veidlinger claims, people become more aware of their own impermanence (annica), a condition "instantiated strongly on the Internet" (p. 180). Then, later, he notes that "we can see that the dynamic space opened up by computer-mediated communication is fostering an environment in which unprecedented opportunities emerge for the realization of core Buddhist concepts such as anitya (annica) and anatman (anatta)" (p. 197). Interesting as it may be to conjecture given the changing social space, as Buddhists is it feasible to envisage insight (or even Enlightenment) gained directly online by the "denizens of cyberspace" analogous to actual normative experiences gained from grounded Buddhist practice given that the core of Buddhism is located in realizing the truth of "suffering" or "unsatisfactoriness" (dukkha) (p. 164)? There is thus something utopic (or eutopic) about how this book portrays computer-mediated communication. Undergirding it is a belief that the internet may lead one to (a comfortable) transcendence and where (as I have earlier noted, and equally speculative) the new prophets of this new (postmodern) electronic religion are the Buddhist "webmasters," now the religious specialists or "virtuosi" for giving definitions, even taking the place of place-based monks as disseminators of religious (insight) knowledge.[5] Chapter 7 is a study of internet use and provides some interesting national data and related discussion, but again I have some discomfort in the conclusion to this chapter that the survey user-data about religious beliefs and online behavior implies that the more time spent on the internet, the "more likely one is to have an affinity for Buddhism," and that this allows or affords its users to unwind the sense of attachment to individuality/self, or with the connection of online practice with the complexity of the Buddha's teachings on Dependent Origination. I agree that there are arguments that this is of course "likely to play an important role in the attractiveness of Buddhism to the wired segments of society" (p. 219). In fact, online Buddhism is more likely to facilitate (virtual) connectivity and to lead to a new sense of religiosity, even to what we may refer to as postmodern Buddhism located in these virtual technologies for the communication of simulated religious ideas and practices. Being "online" is a medium of reproducing actual discourses that are generated within real-life (embodied) communities--at least for those who are able to have access to the internet. There are numerous examples of Buddhist teachers (mostly in the West) who now actively teach online (and posted as YouTube videos), who could have been used as ethnographic case studies. Face-to-face interactions may now rarely take place, except through the virtual online (especially in the Covid-19 pandemic) using various cloud platforms. It is the nature of the imagination that is key to understanding the new communicative technologies, a virtual potential new (third) space and one that potentially may generate not just cultural change but societal change as a whole. It is the totality of this axiological "radical interconnection" that is missing in the book (p. 220). Instead we are offered fragments of thought throughout the eight chapters. Nowhere do I get the sense that these new communications technologies can capture a sense of an exciting new (hyper-real) religiosity, or even religious environment reflecting the sociality in late modernity or postmodernity. However, we can envisage a Buddhism as some kind of "fractal dreaming" (Robins's term) and in so doing using new electronic vectors posit a challenge to normative or orthodox Buddhism. Adam Possamai influenced by Baudrillard's thinking termed "hyper-real religions" to those religions "created out of popular culture which provides inspiration for believers/consumers at a metaphorical level."[6] These are cases where religions and popular culture are so intermingled that it becomes hard to find a sense of the actuality or "real" of religions and religiosity behind them. Possamai in fact identified the internet as a key factor in the transformation and growth of these hyper-religions. In other words (if I may be permitted to finish with Baudrillard), in this creation of a new heterotopic space of simulated digital religion, is this so extenuated from its original source of (communicated) meaning that we end in a more-real-than-real (hyper-real) simulacrum of Buddhism? Notes [1]. James Taylor, "Cyber-Buddhism and Changing Urban Space in Thailand," _Space and Culture_ 6, no. 3 (August 2003): 292-308. [2]. Rob Shields, ed., _Cultures of the Internet, Virtual Spaces, Real Histories, Living Bodies_ (Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 1996); Mark Poster, "Postmodern Virtualities," in _Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk: Cultures of Technological Embodiment_, ed. Mike Featherstone and Roger Burrows (Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 1995): 79-95; Kevin Robbins, "Cyberspace and the World We Live In," in Featherstone and Burrows, _Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk_, 135-55; Mark Nunes, "Jean Baudrillard in Cyberspace: Internet, Virtuality, and Postmodernity," _Style_ 29, no. 2 (Summer 1995): 314-27; and Mark Nunes, _Cyberspaces of Everyday Life_ (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2006). [3]. Thomas Kirsch, "Complexity in the Thai Religious System: An Interpretation," _The Journal of Asian Studies_ 36, no. 2 (February 1977): 241-66. [4]. Paul Virilio, _The Aesthetics of Disappearance_ (New York: Semiotext(e), 1991); Paul Virilio, _Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology_ (1977; repr., New York: Semiotext(e), 1986); and Thomas Sutherland, "Liquid Networks and the Metaphysics of Flux: Ontologies of Flow in an Age of Speed and Mobility," _Theory Culture & Society_ 30, no. 5 (2013): 3-23. [5]. Taylor, "Cyber-Buddhism," 294. [6]. Adam Possamai, _Religion and Popular Culture: A Hyper-Real Testament_ (Brussels: P.I.E-Peter Lang S.A., Éditions Scientifiques Internationales, 2007), 79. Citation: James Taylor. Review of Veidlinger, Daniel, _From Indra's Net to Internet: Communication, Technology, and the Evolution of Buddhist Ideas_. H-Buddhism, H-Net Reviews. September, 2020. URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55472 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. -- Best regards, Andrew Stewart
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Review of *Marxist Literary Criticism Today* by Barbara Foley | James Smethurst | Science & Society
Kevin Lindemann and Cathy Campo
Marxist Literary Criticism Today, by Barbara Foley. London: Pluto Press, 2019. Paper, $29.00. Pp. 265. Barbara Foley’s much-needed Marxist Literary Criticism Today is the first major introductory text on the application of Marxism in literary studies since Terry Eagleton’s Marxism and Literary Criticism (1976) and Raymond Williams’ Marxism and Literature (1977). It is not so much an account of the different varieties of Marxist criticism, though Foley is obviously quite conversant with those varieties, as it is a primer in basic Marxist concepts as tools for understanding and evaluating literature and the cultural work it does. It is also an argument for the efficacy of Marxism for literary interpretation in the service of changing the world. The book is divided into two parts. The first introduces (or reintroduces) the reader to fundamental concepts of Marxism and its methodology. This is one of the most valuable features of the book. Even Raymond Williams, who, too, spent considerable space on basic Marxist concepts of culture, presupposed that the reader had a working knowledge of Marxism. Foley recognizes, however, that in the United States at least many students and scholars have only a fragmentary familiarity with Marx and a limited number of Marxist, neo-Marxist, and post-Marxist thinkers and critics, and are not conversant with Marxism and the Marxist tradition in a sustained way. She provides extremely useful glosses on, among other things, historical materialism, dialectics, ideology, and Marxist economics. While her primary sources for the first portion of the book are Marx and Engels, Foley also draws upon more recent Marxist thinkers, particularly the Hungarian literary and cultural critic Georg Lukács and his notion of “reification,” French philosopher Louis Althusser and his use of “interpellation,” and U. S. literary and cultural critic Frederic Jameson and his concept of the “political unconscious.” The second part of Marxist Literary Criticism Today focuses on literature itself, its definition, interpretation, and teaching from a Marxist perspective. The first chapter of this section discusses a range of topics (commonplaces of bourgeois criticism, really) about what makes literature “literary” (and what makes “good” literature “good”), such as “density,” “showing not telling,” and “universality.” Foley in many cases questions assumptions that are still made all too often about these commonplaces. For example, she quotes to good effect the writer Viet Thanh Nguyen’s declaration that U. S. immigrant writers “come with the desire not just to show, but to tell.” At same time Foley does not simply dismiss qualities of what makes literature literary, but often revises them or recasts them in a Marxist modality. She does not, for instance, reject “universality” as such. What she does reject is any notion of universal values that are somehow above economic class and other historical particularities. Foley frequently refers to Jameson’s directive to “always historicize.” She does suggest that there are human experiences, emotions, and so on, in literature and art that can speak across historical moments. However, she adds that these representations are always written and received in specific historical and cultural contexts. In the succeeding chapter, Foley takes up the general types and con- cerns of Marxist literary criticism, again organized around themes and issues: rhetoric and interpellation; ideological critique; symptomatic reading; humanism, realism, and proletarian literature; alternative hegemony. As in the previous chapter, she doesn’t pretend that her list of concerns is exhaustive; again, she proposes these concerns as an introduction to what Marxist criticism is and what it might do. The portion of the chapter on realism and how Marxist writers and critics have approached the question of representing (and transforming) the real, both in terms of surface detail and of essence, is particularly good. This, after all, is a central concern of any Marxist artist attempting to change the world, and has been the subject of some of the greatest debates among Marxist artists and critics, as in the argument over the value of 19th-century realism versus that of the later avant-garde between Georg Lukács and Bertolt Brecht. The final chapter on pedagogy takes up the actual application of Marxist theory to literary texts. Foley deftly follows Jameson’s dictum on always historicizing to deploy various Marxist readings of popular and “literary” texts within carefully drawn historical and cultural contexts, once more organized around topics, such as “race and racism,” “gender and sexuality,” and “nature.” These readings are convincing and often quite striking, as in the description of Christian Gray in E. L. James’ Fifty Shades of Gray as “Capital as pure money in seductive human form.” It would have been good if Foley had more often historicized Marxist theory and Marxist criticism, and its relation to other schools of criticism, in the same skillful way she did her readings of texts. Such criticism and theory are inevitably a product of a certain place in a certain time. For example, the critical theory, Marxist, non-Marxist, and anti-Marxist, that emerged out of France in the 1950s and 1960s was shaped by an inescapable fact of French intellectual life, the French Communist Party (PCF). The PCF’s version of Marxism was a sort of starting point that, say, Louis Althusser, Jacques Derrida, Frantz Fanon, Michel Foucault, and Julia Kristeva had to negotiate or finesse, whether from inside the Party (like Althusser) or outside (like Foucault after he left the PCF in the 1950s). This had profound effects on their influential work that would not be the case of critical theorists in the United States, which was sort of another planet ideologically in the 1950s and early 1960s. However, that is a relatively minor reservation. After all, Foley intended this book as an introduction to Marxist literary criticism (and Marxism in general), making basic concepts and their application accessible and understandable to students as well as offering teachers ways of presenting Marxist approaches to literature in the classroom. In those objectives, the book succeeds admirably. James Smethurst University of Massachusetts/Amherst
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Re: Saludos desde Dallas Texas
Ken Hiebert
Bienvenidos. Lucharé con mi español limitado.
ken h
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Re: Saludos desde Dallas Texas
Gustavo Sanchez <gsanchez94@...>
Gracias. Espero con interés las discusiones. Gustavo
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2020 at 6:36 PM
From: "Louis Proyect" <lnp3@...> To: marxmail@groups.io Subject: Re: [marxmail] Saludos desde Dallas Texas On 9/24/20 6:30 PM, Gustavo Sanchez wrote:
> Hola camaradas. Mi nombre es Gustavo Sanchez. Soy comunista y vivo en > Dallas, Texas, EE. UU. Mi amigo me contó sobre esta lista de correo y > quería revisarla. ¿Alguna vez tiene discusiones en español? Espero > escuchar de usted. > Gustavo Bienvenido, compañero. Nunca escribamos en sepañol ahora pero usted puede. Quizas otros escriben tambien.
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Re: Saludos desde Dallas Texas
Louis Proyect
On 9/24/20 6:30 PM, Gustavo Sanchez wrote:
Hola camaradas. Mi nombre es Gustavo Sanchez. Soy comunista y vivo en Dallas, Texas, EE. UU. Mi amigo me contó sobre esta lista de correo y quería revisarla. ¿Alguna vez tiene discusiones en español? Espero escuchar de usted.Bienvenido, compañero. Nunca escribamos en sepañol ahora pero usted puede. Quizas otros escriben tambien.
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Saludos desde Dallas Texas
Gustavo Sanchez <gsanchez94@...>
Hola camaradas. Mi nombre es Gustavo Sanchez. Soy comunista y vivo en Dallas, Texas, EE. UU. Mi amigo me contó sobre esta lista de correo y quería revisarla. ¿Alguna vez tiene discusiones en español? Espero escuchar de usted.
Gustavo
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An Extraordinary Film by Aleksandr Andriyevsky
audradavid@...
This is a 1935 adaptation of Karel Capek's RUR. It differs a lot from the original, but it's amazing. No subtitles but the story is easy to follow.
https://youtu.be/-8oe4sCSnc4
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Re: book for review
allan ainsworth
George,
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
I’d be happy to review this book, but can’t do it for about 12 days or so. If that meets your needs for the review, please send a copy along. On another matter, I have re-read my review of Cuban Health Care, and have found one sentence I’d like to slightly correct. I believe you said it would be published in either Nov. or March. Would it be possible for me to make that correction and send it back to you? Allan Ainsworth 50 Saint Moritz Circle Park City, Utah 84098 801-879-9001 cell
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Re: Must read Atlantic Article: "What if Trump refuses to concede?"
Mark Lause
True, but we were discussing what the subject line indicates. Of course, the Democrats are using all of this for their own purposes, but those are pretty simplistic and predictable. Everybody knows what the Democrats are going to do: 1) Whine about how helpless they are; and 2) Blame everybody else for their helplessness. . . . . Oh, and maybe we should add one more: 3) Saying that whole future of 'our democracy' rests on your voting for us, and that defense of democracy requires exercising the oligarchic option of excluding every other alternative that should be on the ballot.
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book for review
george snedeker
I am the Book Review Editor for the journal, Socialism and Democracy. I am looking for someone to review: On Edward Said: Remembrance of Things Past by Hamid Dabashi, Haymarket, 2020.
Here is the blurb on the book: This book is an intimate intellectual, political and
personal portrait of Edward Said, one of the 20th centuries leading public
intellectuals.
If you would like to review this book, write to me at george.snedeker@...
George Snedeker
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The Tragedy of Stephen F. Cohen and the Bolshevik Revolution - CounterPunch.org
Andrew Stewart
https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/09/24/the-tragedy-of-stephen-f-cohen-and-the-bolshevik-revolution/ Best regards, Andrew Stewart - - - Subscribe to the Washington Babylon newsletter via https://washingtonbabylon.com/newsletter/
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