Against the Current, No. 38, May/June 1992
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The Crime of the Centuries
— The Editors -
The Democrats' Wasteland
— Peter Drucker -
1992: A Palestinian View
— Yasmin Adib -
Reproductive Justice for All
— Ron Daniels -
Why I'm Supporting Ron Daniels
— Sabrina Virgo -
The Rebel Girl: Dow Bows, FDA Applauds
— Catherine Sameh -
South Africa: Towards Grassroots Socialism
— Patrick Bond -
Letter to the Editor
— Val Moghadam, Helsinki, Finland -
Letter to the Editor
— Dave Linn, Berkeley, CA - Globalization and Resistance
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Peru: A People Under Siege
— Socialist Challenge -
Our Roots, Our Revolution
— Hugo Blanco -
Random Shots: The Revolution Looks Forward
— R.F. Kampfer - Globalization and Resistance
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A Hawaiian Activist's Fight
— Nancy Holmstrom interviews Haunani-Kay Trask -
Guatemalan Women: Organizing Under the Gun
— Deborah J. Yashar -
Native American Struggles Today
— Jennifer Viereck - Reflections on Socialism After the USSR
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Nationalism at the End-of-Century
— Michael Lowy -
The Future of Marxism
— The Editors -
Privatization and Russian Workers
— Milton Fisk -
Socialism Is Not Stalinism
— Suzi Weissman interviews Mansoor Hekmat -
Worker-Communist Party of Iran
— Mansoor Hekmat and others -
End of Stalinism, Beginning of Marxism
— Hillel H. Ticktin - Dialogue
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Before Stalinism (a continuing symposium)
— The Editors -
Rejoinder: Revolutionary as Conservative
— Tim Wohlforth -
Of Lenin and Leninism
— Bernard Rosen - Reviews
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The Politics of Affirmative Action
— Aaron Brenner
The Editors
WHAT IS THE future of Marxism–of revolutionary working-class politics–after the end of the Cold War system and the collapse of the USSR?
We present here three contributions to a critical ongoing discussion, offering varying perspectives on Marxism in relation to nationalism and other questions. Michael Lowy, a theorist and activist with deep roots in both the European and Brazilian struggles, was asked by the editors of ATC to discuss the problems of national liberation and nationalist thought in the new world situation. Mansoor Hekmat, the leader of an Iranian revolutionary workers’ group in exile, spoke with ATC editor Suzi Weissman on her program Portraits of the USSR on KPFK in Los Angeles. Hillel Ticktin, whose personal and political roots lie in the struggle in South Africa and the analysis of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, argues that the “end of Stalinism” makes the rediscovery and purification of authentic Marxism both possible and essential for revolutionaries today. Needless to say these contributions are published not to close a discussion but to further stimulate it.
May-June 1992, ATC 38