Against the Current, No. 66, January/February 1997
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The Center-Center Coalition
— The Editors -
The Civic Movement in South Africa: Popular Politics, Then and Now
— Mzwanele Mayekiso -
Serbia's Democratic Uprising
— Suzi Weissman interviews Borka Pavicevic -
The U.S. and Canadian Auto Contracts
— Caroline Lund -
The '96 Nicaraguan Elections: How Aleman "Won"
— Dianne Feeley -
Mexico's Deepening Crisis (Part 2)
— Dan La Botz -
Introduction to Queer Internationalism
— The Editors -
On Queer Internationalism
— Rafael Bernabe -
Radical Rhythms: Hip Hop, Jazz and the Future
— Kim Hunter -
A Tribute to Mario Savio and the FSM
— Mike Parker -
The Rebel Girl: Hoops Without Rodman, Anyone?
— Catherine Sameh -
Random Shots: The Life of the Party
— R.F. Kampfer -
Letter to the Editors
— Martin Glaberman - Resistance, Culture and African-American Survival
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Pittsburgh's Police Brutality and Hot Autumn
— an interview with Dr. Claire Cohen -
Robert F. Williams, Modern Abolitionist
— Charles Simmons -
Time for A Strategic Agenda
— Anthony Thigpen -
Jazz--Its Meaning, Its Future
— Melba Joyce Boyd and Donald Walden -
The Writings of David Roediger
— Roger Horowitz - Reviews
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Mzwanele Mayekiso's Township Politics
— Julie Klinker -
Socialist Reformism and "Evolutionary" Debate
— Michael Löwy -
Stanley Crouch, Neocon or Ellisonian?
— Greg Robinson
The Editors
THROUGHOUT THE PAST year, Against the Current has published a number of major explorations of revolutionary and labor history and theory, to mark the tenth anniversary of the new series of the journal. The following essay by Rafael Bernabe, a recapitulation of Lenin’s views on the “national question” and their relevance to present-day debates on liberation and “difference,” is a particularly salient contribution. We are publishing it not only at the close of our tenth anniversary volume, but also to coincide with Black History Month.
Although Bernabe’s discussion here doesn’t deal directly with African-American liberation, the application of the principles of the right of self-determination to Black struggle and the quest for united working-class struggle in the USA has been fundamental for U.S. Marxists for nearly seventy years. The issues raised here are thus all the more timely.
ATC 66, January-February 1997