Rebel Without a Cause
The politics of The Hunger Games series aren’t as revolutionary as they’ve been hyped to be.
William G. Martin teaches at SUNY-Binghamton and is co-author of After Prisons? Freedom, Decarceration, and Justice Disinvestment (2016) and a founding member of Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier; he covers local justice matters at www.justtalk.blog
The politics of The Hunger Games series aren’t as revolutionary as they’ve been hyped to be.
Our first retraction
Things haven’t gone as planned since the fall of the monarchy in Nepal. The Left should embrace the struggle for a federal constitution.

What the worst environmental disaster in Brazilian history tells us about the real cost of privatization.

Antonio Gramsci on socialism and New Year’s Day.

A year of smooth jazz and revolutionary exhortations.

The demand for abortion has had the most success when it’s been free of preemptive compromise.
An interview with one of India’s staunchest opponents of religious nationalism.
If we want people-centered development in the Global South, it will have to be led by strong left movements.
Though he became a Reaganite, Frank Sinatra’s early career was shaped by the Popular Front’s experiments in left-wing culture.
Before Donald Trump, there was Father Charles Coughlin, who popularized fascism for Americans in the 1930s.

Feminism provided me with the tools to work toward a new kind of socialism.

The BRICS powers aren’t anti-colonial counterweights. They’re looking for new markets and resources for their corporations, just like Western countries.
The Berlin Wall’s fall sparked dreams of a radically democratic East Germany. Unemployment and privatization followed instead.
André Glucksmann died last month. Why did he and so many other French intellectuals turn to the right after May 1968?

What’s behind Santa’s bloody rise? Three leading elven labor activists offer a class analysis of the North Pole “gift economy.”
The definitive explanation of the Democratic National Committee’s “Datagate” scandal and what the mainstream media got wrong.
Benedict Anderson was a brilliant scholar whose work was animated by a deep commitment to human emancipation.

Erik Olin Wright on class, socialism, and the meaning of Marxism.