Daniel Singer Millennium Prize Essay
Every socialist has surely indulged in speculation about an ideal society from time to time. The realities of our own society certainly encourage such flights of fancy. But they should not be considered entirely fanciful: without imaginative thinking, it is quite impossible to see how the world might be changed for the better. Yet without any practical grounding, such exercises cannot take us any nearer to the “realistic utopia” that should be our goal | more…
Daniel Singer’s first book was Prelude to Revolution: France in May 1968, published in 1970. There he posed the question: Could it be that a socialist revolution is beginning, that Marxism is returning to its home ground, the advanced countries for which it was designed? And he answered his own question, Yes. The main message of the May crisis was that a revolutionary situation can occur in an advanced capitalist country | more…
Until recently, a pervasive sense of there-is-no-alternative left us with a
debilitating pessimism. Seattle was, arguably, the long-awaited antidote. Where social democracy had seen the power of capital and was cowed by it, the Seattle protesters recognized that building a decent world meant actively resisting it. In this defiant understanding that resistance creates the space for hope, the chain of protests initiated by Seattle fell in with a tradition that saw realism in historic terms, rather than in a fetishism of the present | more…