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An Unmet Challenge: Race and the Left in America

Ben Blumberg

For the American Left in the first half the 20th century—commonly referred to as the “Old Left”— the task of advancing freedom entailed a thoroughgoing critique of the racist institutions in American society, a socioeconomic and historical analysis of their origins and contemporary function, as well as practical efforts to eradicate these structures. In other words, racism was the challenge faced by the American Old Left. However, to a large extent it evaded the very challenge it set for itself by accepting the characterization of the black population’s political situation as “the Negro problem.” Only the best of the Old Left pushed against this characterization. The New Left, seeking to overcome the Old Left’s shortcomings and receiving a great impulse from the demands of the Civil Rights movement to do so, would nevertheless come to reenact the previous generation’s failings. This brings forth an uncomfortable question: if Marxists in the United States were unable to meet the challenge of raising racism to the level of a transformable reality, then to what extent can we speak of an American tradition of Marxism—a Marxism adequate to the situation of American capitalism—at all?

January 8th, 2010 | PR web editor | 0 comments | Continued
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Between Old Left and New: A postwar balance sheet

Ian Morrison
THE PERIOD FROM THE FIRST WORLD WAR to the Cold War belies easy classification. Unlike the single decade associated with the New Left, this extensive and historically dense period, that of the “Old Left,” has to be broken up into decades. Indeed, this is done even in the popular imagination, in which the 1930s [...]

December 6th, 2009 | PR web editor | 0 comments | Continued
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The Failure of the Islamic Revolution

The nature of the present crisis in Iran

Chris Cutrone

Confusion on the Left around the 2009 electoral crisis in Iran has been expressed both in defense of President Ahmadinejad’s claim to victory as well as by support of Iranian dissidents and protesters. Slavoj Žižek has weighed in, questioning prevailing understandings of the nature of the Iranian regime and its Islamist character. Responses to the current crisis have recapitulated problems on the Left in understanding the Islamic Revolution since 1979. All share in attributing to Iran an autonomous historical rhythm or logic of its own, rather than as a symptomatic effect of a greater history. Žižek has come closest to addressing this issue of greater context, but even he has failed to address the history of the Left.

August 24th, 2009 | Platypus Review editor | 1 comment | Continued
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Resurrecting the ’30s

A response to David Harvey and James Heartfield
Ian Morrison
THE LAST FORTY YEARS have been conceptually be­wildering for the Left. The withering of working class movements and the rise of the new social movements have coincided with a global shift away from national state-centric (or “Fordist”) modes of accumulation towards a more “global,” neo-liberal capitalism.

May 15th, 2009 | Platypus Review editor | 0 comments | Continued
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Going it Alone: Christopher Hitchens and the death of the Left

Book Review: Cottee, Simon and Thomas Cushman (eds.). Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq, and the Left. New York: New York University Press, 2008.
Spencer A. Leonard
If History did not, as the conservative critic Francis Fukuyama pronounced, come to end in 1989, this is because, in the sense of being the self-realization of freedom, History [...]

March 15th, 2009 | Platypus Review editor | 1 comment | Continued
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Nothing Left to say: a critique of the Guardian’s coverage of the 2008 Mumbai attacks

Spencer A. Leonard
[This article has been reprinted in Mainstream Weekly]

Deep historical precedents
However sincere its backers or belligerent its enemies, the “War on Terror” is not and cannot become anti-Islamist. This is not because, as some think, there is no Islamist or Taliban-style fascism on the receiving end of America’s War on Terror. Far from it. [...]

February 3rd, 2009 | Platypus Review editor | 2 comments | Continued
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Obama: three comparisons: MLK, JFK, FDR

The coming sharp turn to the Right
Chris Cutrone
In previous articles I have addressed the Presidential campaign of Barack Obama in terms of the historical precedents of MLK, Jr. (the end of “black politics”) and JFK (Iraq and the election). Now I wish to address the final and perhaps most important but problematic comparison that might [...]

November 1st, 2008 | Platypus Review editor | 0 comments | Continued
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Capital in history: The need for a Marxian philosophy of history of the Left

Chris Cutrone
[The following is a talk given at the Marxist-Humanist Committee public forum on The Crisis in Marxist Thought, hosted by the Platypus Affiliated Society in Chicago on Friday, July 25, 2008.]
I want to speak about the meaning of history for any purportedly Marxian Left.
We in Platypus focus on the history of the Left because [...]

October 1st, 2008 | Platypus Review editor | 3 comments | Continued
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Marx after Marxism: An interview with Moishe Postone

Benjamin Blumberg and Pam C Nogales C
Moishe Postone is Professor of History at the University of Chicago, and his seminal book Time, Labor, and Social Domination: A Reinterpretation of Marx’s Critical Theory investigates Marx’s categories of commodity, labor, and capital, and the saliency of Marx’s critique of capital in the neoliberal context of the present. Rescuing [...]

March 1st, 2008 | Platypus Review editor | 1 comment | Continued
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Vicissitudes of historical consciousness and possibilities for emancipatory social politics today

“The Left is Dead! — Long Live the Left!” — Platypus, Chicago

Chris Cutrone
“The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living.”
— Karl Marx, The 18th Brumaire of Louis Napoleon (1852)
“The theorist who intervenes in practical controversies nowadays discovers on a regular basis and to his shame that [...]

November 1st, 2007 | Platypus Review editor | 1 comment | Continued