Against the Current, No. 167, November/December 2013
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No Easy Victories
— The Editors -
Obama, African Americans and War on the Working Poor
— Malik Miah -
Which Way Out for Detroit?
— Dianne Feeley -
Canary Islands vs. Big Oil
— Norma Wilow -
Museum of the Word and Image
— Diana C.S. Becerra -
A Militant, "Minority" Union?
— Steve Early -
The Budget/Deficit Deal
— David Finkel -
The Passion of Richard Seymour
— Alan Wald -
Support Edur Velasco Arregui!
— Richard Roman - Arab World Uprising
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Introduction: Middle East Upheaval
— The Editors -
On Syria Crisis and Prospects
— Val Moghadam -
On the Perils of Imperialism
— Hisham H. Ahmed -
Roads to the Arab Uprisings
— Kit Adam Wainer - Remembering E.P. Thompson
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Introduction to Remembering E.P. Thompson
— The Editors -
E.P. Thompson: Feminism, Gender, Women and History
— Barbara Winslow -
Thompson, William Morris and Ecosocialist Tasks
— Rafael Bernabe - Reviews
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Dream Worlds Here and There
— Jase Short -
The New "Politics from Below"
— Midge Quandt -
The Politics of Extractivism
— Devin Beaulieu and Nancy Postero -
Mexico in Labor's Crucible
— Dan La Botz -
Forging the Capital Security State
— Allen Ruff -
A Poet for Our Planet
— Alice M. Azure
The Editors
THE CLASSIC WORK of Edward P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class, 1780-1832, viewed the violent transformation brought by the Industrial Revolution as it was experienced from below, in the lives of people being formed into a modern working class.
Too often considered solely as the product of an objective economic process that produced “progress” despite the attendant difficulties, in Thompson’s view, this working class needed to be understood as an agent of its own formation and coming to consciousness. Creatively and controversially, Thompson’s work developed this theme in ways that shaped a new generation of left and labor historians.
On the 50th anniversary of this book, Against the Current asked a number of historians to briefly assess Thompson’s work, its legacy and its impact on their own lives and careers. The first of these responses — Paul Buhle, Bruce Levine, Bryan Palmer and Ellen Meiksins Wood — appeared in our previous issue. We continue here with contributions by Barbara Winslow and Rafael Bernabe. The final installment will appear in ATC 168.
November/December 2013, ATC 167