The Trouble With Anti-Antiracism
Movements targeting racial disparities aren’t distracting attention from class inequality — they’re part of a broader radicalization against American capitalism.
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Paul Heideman holds a PhD in American studies from Rutgers University–Newark.
Movements targeting racial disparities aren’t distracting attention from class inequality — they’re part of a broader radicalization against American capitalism.
Thomas Ferguson on how voter alienation from corporate candidates produced this year’s dizzying election results.
A generation ago, socialists and civil rights activists tried to transform the Democratic Party. Why did they fail?
The policies President Obama outlined in last night’s State of the Union will only reinforce the trends that produced Donald Trump.
Jacobin contributors on Bernie Sanders’ democratic socialism speech and what his candidacy means for the Left.
Some post-debate thoughts from Jacobin contributors.
With powerful class movements behind it, technology can promise emancipation from work, not more misery.
Despite all evidence to the contrary, blaming black culture for racial inequality remains politically dominant. And not only on the Right.
To understand how a body of thought became an era of capitalism requires more than intellectual history.