Ecological Marxism in the Anthropocene Review of the Month
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Ecological Marxism in the Anthropocene

In this interview with Xu Tao and Lv Jiayi, John Bellamy Foster discuss the history and present of ecological Marxism. Foster explores origins of the term Anthropocene and its predecessors, the concept of degrowth, the continuing influence of metabolic rift theory, and the cutting-edge issues facing young scholars of degrowth today.
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October 2025 (Volume 77, Number 4)

October 2025 (Volume 77, Number 4)
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Has the Anthropocene Been Canceled? Article

Has the Anthropocene Been Canceled?

Ian Angus illuminates the politics behind the decision by the International Union of Geological Sciences not to recognize the Anthropocene as a formal geological epoch. In recounting the debate, Angus explores how the organization undermined the conclusions of top scientists to oppose the establishment of the Anthropocene, and its implications for the public debate about the planetary crisis.
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Marxism and the History of Philosophy Article

Marxism and the History of Philosophy

"Why," Helena Sheehan asks, "have Marxists…put so much emphasis on the history of philosophy?" She adds: "Is the current G. W. F. Hegel revival conductive to coming to terms with the current conjuncture?" In answering these questions, Sheehan elucidates deep truths about the core of Marxist philosophy and practice, and the importance of remaining deeply rooted in the real world.

This article will be released in full online October 10, 2025. Current subscribers: please log in to view this article.

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The Economics Profession “Discovers” Secular Stagnation Article

The Economics Profession “Discovers” Secular Stagnation

Michael Meeropol, Howard J. Sherman, and Paul D. Sherman give an account of how mainstream economists came to adopt the idea of secular stagnation, even without recognizing its origins in the work of Marxist economist and MR founder Paul M. Sweezy. The turn, they write, came in the wake of the Great Recession, when the tendency toward stagnation in the U.S. economy became undeniable.

This article will be released in full online October 14, 2025. Current subscribers: please log in to view this article.

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The great insomnia Poetry

The great insomnia

A new poem by Marge Piercy.
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The Long Road of Tariq Ali Review

The Long Road of Tariq Ali

Paul Buhle reviews two books by renowned leftist Tariq Ali. In these two texts, Buhle writes, one can read and discern a history of the UK left. Through Ali's autobiography, Buhle writes, readers can experience the ups and downs of various factions, from the Labour Party to Trotskyist journals; through his memoirs, we get a sense of Ali's deep insights, drawn from his extensive travels and a life deeply embedded in history.

This article will be released in full online October 21, 2025. Current subscribers: please log in to view this article.

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The Ethics and Dialectics of Freedom and Universality: The Sources of Materialist Moral Judgments Review

The Ethics and Dialectics of Freedom and Universality: The Sources of Materialist Moral Judgments

Oscar R. Ralda reviews Vanessa Christian Wills's Marx's Ethical Vision (2024). Wills's text, Ralda notes, demonstrates a "facility with which [she] deals with Marx's works, as well as a "strong philosophical case…for the ongoing relevance of a coherent Marxian moral theory." The latter, Rada notes, sheds light on the moral imperative to work toward socialist liberation from a foundation of resolute Marxian values.

This article will be released in full online October 28, 2025. Current subscribers: please log in to view this article.

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Power, Control, Inequality, and Democracy in the Twenty-First Century Review of the Month

Power, Control, Inequality, and Democracy in the Twenty-First Century

Jayati Ghosh illuminates how capitalism has exacerbated inequality not only due to market forces, but as a result of how wealthy countries and firms based within them have tilted the scales toward themselves, disenfranchising the rest of the world in the process. This pervasive economic inequality, Ghosh concludes, undermines the idea and practice of true democracy.
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The Grammar of Resistance: Rethinking Palestine Beyond Pity and Fear Article Interview

The Grammar of Resistance: Rethinking Palestine Beyond Pity and Fear

In this interview, published here for the first time in English, Abdaljawad Omar (aka Abboud Hamayel) and Pasquale Liguori discuss Western media attempts to force upon Palestinians narratives of either victimhood or savagery. These portrayals, however, only obscure the threat Palestinian resistance poses not just to Zionism, but to the colonial project globally.
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Neocolonialism through Debt: How French and U.S. Banks Underdeveloped Haiti Article

Neocolonialism through Debt: How French and U.S. Banks Underdeveloped Haiti

In 2003, Haitian president Jean-Betrand Aristide publicly called for France to pay reparations to Haiti—and less than a year later, was whisked away from the island via U.S. military aircraft. Steve Cushion sheds light on the colonial and neocolonial relationships that have imposed crushing debt on Haiti and its people, and their continuing implications for Haiti's development.
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Gogol’s Nose: On the Scent of Our Times Article

Gogol’s Nose: On the Scent of Our Times

Andy Merrifield explores Nikolai Gogol's short story "The Nose," a satirical tale featuring a puffed-up government official who finds himself suddenly nose-less. As the official pursues his formerly attached schnozz through the streets of St. Petersburg, Gogol bestows upon readers a twisted parable revealing the pettiness and indolence pervading the corridors of power.
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Black Scare in California: Blacks, Reds, and Revolution in the 1960s and ’70s Review

Black Scare in California: Blacks, Reds, and Revolution in the 1960s and ’70s

Joel Wendland-Liu reviews Armed Struggle?, Gerald Horne's exploration of the state violence and repression that were successfully employed to demolish the Black Panther Party and its influence throughout the 1960s and '70s. Though Horne's recounting, Wendland-Liu writes, we can take powerful lessons about the roles of race and class in the militant drive toward liberation.
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Freedom and Economics Archive

Freedom and Economics

"Assume a ship under the command of a mad captain headed for certain shipwreck. What would freedom mean to the people on board?" asked MR cofounder Paul M. Sweezy in this previously unpublished discussion piece. "There can hardly be any doubt about the answer…the essence of freedom for the people on the ship is the ability to control their collective fate."
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More Articles from Monthly Review
Venezuelan migrants “destroying New York”? (David Wilson featured on NYU Press blog)

So why not just end the U.S. embargo on Venezuela? If Venezuelans are coming here just to escape economic problems at home, reducing the embargo should bring about a major decline in Venezuelan asylum seekers.

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Listen: Chris Gilbert’s Commune or Nothing! featured on ‘Cosmonaut’

Recently the podcast Cosmonaut hosted Chris Gilbert for a discussion of his new book 'Commune or Nothing!' They covered topics such as: The history of communes, the Venezuelan cooperative movement and the drive to build state-run industry; István Mészáros' perspective on how the commune centers the communal control of the labor process; the problem of attracting the youth to communes today; the mystical side of communes in relation to human development, and more...

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Offering hope to the left (Until We Fall reviewed in ‘Morning Star’)

Already in the early 1980s if not before: “It was clear to most of us that socialism couldn’t survive without radical democratisation ... it had to be based on consent.” Nevertheless, for Sheehan as for many of us on the left, the demise of the socialist bloc represented a defeat and the restoration of capitalism. It was “the most dramatic upheaval, politically and psychologically,” Sheehan says.

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Towards postcapitalist tech (Beyond Digital Capitalism reviewed in ‘Science and Society’)

The book ends with a broad literature review on our possible postcapitalist future by Greg Albo. This concluding chapter and the rest of the book offer the reader hope to overcome the contemporary crisis and meet a healthier and happier future

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