Description: You will receive these NINE BOOKS on anarchist anti-capitalism: *Cole, G.D.H. - Towards a Libertarian Socialism*Fritsch, Kelly - Keywords for Radicals*Gilman-Opalsky, Richard - Communism of Love*Goodway, David - For Workers' Power*Hahnel, Robin - Participatory Economy*Jun, Nathan - Proletarian Days*Milstein, Cindy - Taking Sides*Truscello, Michael - Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?*Wetzel, Tom - Overcoming Capitalism TOTAL WEIGHT: 9.7 LbsTOTAL PAGES: 3,200TOTAL CONDITION: All Brand New Cole, G.D.H. - Towards a Libertarian Socialism"Towards a Libertarian Socialism: Reflections on the British Labour Party and European Working-Class Movements," by G.D.H. Cole, edited by David Goodway, pubilshed by AK Press, 2021.ISBN: 978-1-84935-389-2Weight: 1 LbCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 302 Fritsch, Kelly - Keywords for Radicals"Keywords for Radicals: The Contested Vocabulary of Late-Capitalist Struggle," edited by Kelly Fristch, Clare O'Connor, AK Thompson, published by AK Press, 2016.ISBN-13: 978-1849352420Weight: 1.85 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 567 Gilman-Opalsky, Richard - Communism of Love"The Communism of Love: An Inquiry into the Poverty of Exchange Value," by Richard Gilman-Opalsky, published by the AK Press, 2020.ISBN-13: 978-1849353915Weight: 1.05 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 327 Goodway, David - For Workers' Power"For Workers' Power: The Selected Writings of Maurice Brinton," edited by David Goodway, second edition, published by AK Press, 2020.ISBN: 978-1-84935-383-0Weight: 1.5 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 500 Hahnel, Robin - Participatory Economy"A Participatory Economy," by Robin Hahnel, published by AK Press, 2022.ISBN: 978-1-84935-484-4Weight: 0.8 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 278 Jun, Nathan - Proletarian Days"Proletarian Days: A Hippolyte Havel Reader," edited by Nathan Jun, introduction by Barry Pateman, published by AK Press, 2018.ISBN-13: 978-1849353281Weight: 1.01 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 450 Milstein, Cindy - Taking Sides"Taking Sides: Revolutionary Solidarity and the Poverty of Liberalism," edited by Cindy Milstein, published by AK Press, 2015.ISBN: 978-1849352321Weight: 0.5 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 156 Truscello, Michael - Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?"Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?: Organizing the Twenty-First Century Resistance," edited by Michael Truscello and Ajamu Nangwaya, foreword by Affiong Limene Affiong, published by AK Press, 2017.ISBN-13: 978-1849352789Weight: 0.99 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 277 Wetzel, Tom - Overcoming Capitalism"Overcoming Capitalism: Strategy for the Working Class in the 21st Century," by Tom Wetzel, published by AK Press, 2022.ISBN: 978-1-84935-470-7Weight: 1.05 LbsCover: PaperbackCondition: Brand NewPages: 431 Descriptions: Cole, G.D.H. - Towards a Libertarian Socialism:From Publisher: A collection of essays from a restive, critical member of Britain’s Labour Party. From the 1920s until his death, G.D.H. Cole was a pre-eminent Labour intellectual who considered himself “neither a Communist nor a Social Democrat in the ordinary sense, but something, not betwixt and between these two, but essentially different from both.” He was a libertarian socialist who loathed coercion, bureaucracy, and the “money-grubbing way of life under capitalism.” Fritsch - Keywords for Radicals:From Publisher: In Keywords (1976), Raymond Williams devised a "vocabulary" that reflected the vast social transformations of the post-war period. He revealed how these transformations could be grasped by investigating changes in word usage and meaning. Keywords for Radicals—part homage, part development—asks: What vocabulary might illuminate the social transformations marking our own contested present? How do these words define the imaginary of today's radical left? With insights from dozens of scholars and troublemakers, Keywords for Radicals explores the words that shape our political landscape. Each entry highlights a term's contested variations, traces its evolving usage, and speculates about what its historical mutations can tell us. More than a glossary, this is a crucial study of the power of language and the social contradictions hidden within it. Gilman-Opalsky, Richard - Communism of Love:From Publisher: Exploring the meanings and powers of love from Ancient Greece to the present day, Richard Gilman-Opalsky argues that what is called “love” by the best thinkers to have approached the subject is in fact the beating heart of communism—that is, communism understood as a human yearning and way of life, not as a form of government. Along the way, he reveals with clarity that the capitalist method of assigning value to things is incapable of appreciating what humans treasure most. Capitalism cannot value the experiences and relationships that make our lives worth living; it can only destroy love by turning it into a commodity. The Communism of Love follows the struggles of love in different contexts of race, class, gender, and sexuality, and shows how the aspiration for love is as close as we may get to a universal communist aspiration. Goodway, David - For Workers' Power:From Publisher: Since the 1960s, many radicals have had their eyes opened by the writing of Maurice Brinton. The most prolific writer of the British Solidarity group, which existed from 1961 to 1992, his work toppled countless dusty towers of standard leftist thinking. For Brinton, “actually existing socialism” did not, in fact, exist. It had to be created. Brinton wrote with passion, clarity, and consistency on behalf of worker self-activity and self-management, and he decried those who reinforced passivity, apathy, cynicism, pecking orders, and alienation among workers. To him, this oppressive behavior was as prevalent among state socialists and communist parties as it was among capitalists, because it enabled rulers and would-be rulers of every political stripe to deceive and manipulate those in whose name they claimed to act. Today, when a new crop of so-called democratic socialists are seeking state power, allegedly on behalf of working people, Brinton’s work is as relevant as ever. Hahnel, Robin - Participatory Economy:From Publisher: As of June 2021, 54% of Gen Z adults view capitalism negatively and over 41% have a positive view on socialism. A Participatory Economy is written for people who want an equitable, ecological economy but don't know what an alternative to capitalism could look like. A Participatory Economy presents a fascinating alternative to capitalism. It proposes and defends concrete answers to how all society's economic decisions can be made without resorting to unaccountable and inhumane markets (capitalism) or central planning authorities (state communism). It explains the viability of early socialism's vision of an economy in which the workers come together to decide among themselves what to produce and consume. At the same time, Hahnel proposes new features to this economic model including proposing how “reproductive labor” might be socially organized, how to plan investment and long-term development to maximize popular participation and efficiency, and finally, how a participatory economy might engage in international trade and investment without violating its fundamental principles in a world where economic development among nations has been historically unfair and unequal. Jun, Nathan - Proletarian Days:From Publisher: In this, the first published collection of writings by Hippolyte Havel (1871–1950), Nathan Jun brings a crucial, yet largely forgotten revolutionary figure back into historical focus. Havel was a Czech anarchist at the center of New York’s political and artistic circles at the turn of the twentieth century. He was an editor of numerous publications, including Emma Goldman’s Mother Earth and his influence on several writers, artists, and intellectuals (including Eugene O’Neill, Joseph Stieglitz, and Sadakichi Hartmann) helped shape American modernism. Proletarian Days provides an illuminating introduction to the man and his times. Milstein, Cindy - Taking Sides:From Publisher: The lines of oppression are already drawn. The only question is, Which side are you on in the struggle against the violence that is white supremacy and policing? Taking Sides supplies an ethical compass and militant map of the terrain, arguing not for reform of structurally brutal institutions but rather for their abolition. Its thirteen essays are sharp interventions that take particular aim at the role of nonprofits, “ally” politics, and “peace police” in demobilizing rebellions against hierarchical power. The authors offer tools to hone strategies and tactics of resistance, and hold out the promise of robust, tangible solidarity across racial and other lines, because in the battle for systemic transformation, there are no outside agitators. Truscello, Michael - Why Don't the Poor Rise Up?:From Publisher: Why don't the poor rise up? Even mainstream media like the New York Times and The Economist have recently posed this question, uneasily amazed that capitalism hasn't met with greater resistance. In the context of unparalleled global wealth disparity, ecological catastrophe, and myriad forms of structural oppression, this vibrant collection offers a reassessment of contemporary obstacles to mass mobilization, as well as examples from around the world of poor people overcoming those obstacles in inspiring and instructive new ways. With contributions from Idle No More organizer Alex Wilson, noted Italian autonomist Franco "Bifo" Berardi, Cooperation Jackson organizer Kali Akuno, Cape Town-based anarchists Aragorn Eloff and Anna Selmeczi, and sixteen other scholars and activists from around the world, including a Foreword by Affiong Limene Affiong, Nigerian co-founder of Moyo wa Taifa, a Pan-Afrikan Women's Solidarity Network, Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? presents a truly global range of perspectives that explore the question of revolution, its objective and subjective prerequisites, and its increasing likelihood in our time. Wetzel, Tom - Overcoming Capitalism:From Publisher: Overcoming Capitalism is a book about strategy, particularly how the powerless can get the upper hand. And it’s written for everyone—not a specialized, self-selected audience. Tom Wetzel carefully explains how capitalism works and how the structure is stacked against us with an eye toward where power lies and how we can tip the scales. The book is a twenty-first century reworking of the approach to unionism. The United States has a dramatic history of workers organizing on the job. In the last seventy odd years labor organizations have made peace with owners, and wages, various protections, and safety has diminished. All during an era that, despite its ups and downs, has been extremely profitable for the ownership class. Wetzel provides a solution to that failure by showing how a democratic outcome can be built into the method of struggle for social change, giving working people the means to ensure they will end up in control of the labor process and will build a from-the-bottom-up ecosocialism. But this isn’t the old white-guy-in-a-hard-hat unionism of the previous century. The working class has changed. Life under capitalism has changed. How we think about unionism must also change. While the political and capitalist class wring their hands over the environmental crisis and economic inequality we can see the immediate appeal of a union movement with an expanded mission to wrest control from the wealthy and powerful before they cost-shift us into extinction.
Price: 149.99 USD
Location: Pawtucket, Rhode Island
End Time: 2024-11-23T21:03:22.000Z
Shipping Cost: 11.38 USD
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Language: English
Book Title: Multiple
Author: G.D.H. Cole, Kelly Fritsch, Richard Gilman-Opalsky, David Goodway, Robin Hahnel, Nathan Jun, Cindy Milsetin, Cindy Milstein, Michael Truscello, Tom Wetzel
Topic: Books