Hubert Harrison: A Giant Remembered Review
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Hubert Harrison: A Giant Remembered

Paul Buhle reviews Hubert Harrison: Forbidden Genius of Black Radicalism, a new biography of the seminal—yet previously lesser known—activist and journalist, Hubert Harrison. Through this new intellectual and cultural study of Harrison's remarkable life and work, Buhle writes, author Brian Kwoba tells a story of a man ahead of his time in challenging white supremacy and capitalism through Black radical thought.
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December 2025 (Volume 77, Number 7)

December 2025 (Volume 77, Number 7)
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Robert W. McChesney (1952–2025) Memorial

Robert W. McChesney (1952–2025)

John Bellamy Foster introduces our special issue celebrating the life and work of MR former coeditor and MR Press author Robert W. McChesney. In his recounting of over 50 years of close friendship and collaboration, Foster paints a portrait of McChesney as a visionary intellectual and activist whose work will reverberate through the communication field for decades to come.
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Bob McChesney: A Life Well Lived Memorial

Bob McChesney: A Life Well Lived

In this deeply personal essay, communication scholar Inger Stole shares with readers a glimpse into her life with Robert W. McChesney, her husband of 37 years. Stole reveals the depth of feeling with which McChesney approached all aspects of life, from his work as an intellectual and advocate to his role as a father and life partner.
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A Democratic Socialist in Our Age Article

A Democratic Socialist in Our Age

John Nichols, Robert W. McChesney's longtime collaborator and frequent coauthor, celebrates McChesney's near-clairvoyant thought and scholarship. Nichols notes that McChesney's impressive foresight enabled him to see the pitfalls of the digital age long before the Internet became a tool for the worst impulses of the elites under capitalism.
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A Clarion Call for Communication Democracy Article

A Clarion Call for Communication Democracy

Matthew Rothschild looks back on nearly 40 years working alongside his friend and colleague Robert W. McChesney. McChesney, he writes, brought to the world a sharp analysis of not only the contradiction between corporate media and democracy, but between the capitalist system as a whole and a true democracy that serves the people.
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Communication Should Be a Rebellious Field! Article

Communication Should Be a Rebellious Field!

Sigurd Allern echoes Robert W. McChesney's call for an insurgent communication scholarship that extends beyond the borders of academia and understands media not just as an industry, but as a public good and—critically—key infrastructure for functioning democracy.
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Be Realistic, Demand the Impossible: Reflections on Bob McChesney’s Academic Impact and the Future of the Communication Field Article

Be Realistic, Demand the Impossible: Reflections on Bob McChesney’s Academic Impact and the Future of the Communication Field

Mandy Tröger and Sydney L. Forde explore the impact that Robert W. McChesney's work has had on both the communication field and on their work as the new generation of scholars. "To honor [McChesney]," they write, "is not to look up in awe, but look out…toward the unfinished work of building a more democratic field and society."
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Reinventing Local Journalism: Carrying Forward Bob McChesney’s Unfinished Project Article

Reinventing Local Journalism: Carrying Forward Bob McChesney’s Unfinished Project

Victor Pickard celebrates the passion and clarity that Robert W. McChesney brought to his work as an author, media advocate, and founder of Free Press—and in particular, McChesney's bold proposals for a publicly funded and democratic model of local journalism designed to serve communities, rather than corporate interests.
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Capitalism in the Age of Digital Technology Article

Capitalism in the Age of Digital Technology

In this transcript of a talk from 2015, Robert W. McChesney discusses the "great definitional communication revolutions" that have shaped humanity's trajectory. Even a decade ago, McChesney was able to see the fraught relationship between new technology and democracy, the re-emergence of fascism, and the political dangers of the Digital Age.
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Fiftieth Anniversary Retrospective on Pomfret (Class of 1971) Article

Fiftieth Anniversary Retrospective on Pomfret (Class of 1971)

Writing upon the fiftieth anniversary of his graduation from Pomfret School in Connecticut, Robert W. Chesney shares in his own words the story of his intellectual development, from his teen years through his studies at The Evergreen State College, and how they shaped his career as a journalist and activist—including his role as coeditor of MR.
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Eco-Marxism and Prometheus Unbound: Capitalist versus Socialist Ecomodernism Review of the Month

Eco-Marxism and Prometheus Unbound: Capitalist versus Socialist Ecomodernism

In Aeschylus’s play Prometheus Bound, the Prometheus is a revolutionary figure. Defying divine interdiction to bring fire to humanity, the Titan has since been adopted by thinkers from the Enlightenment to today to represent revolutionary forces in human existence. So, John Bellamy Foster asks in November’s Review of the Month, what is “Prometheanism,” and how has the term been used (and misused) in discussions of Marx, the ecological crisis, and sustainable human development?
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The World Wants to Advance to Socialism Article

The World Wants to Advance to Socialism

In this far-reaching analysis, Vijay Prashad enumerates the conditions of the current conjuncture that, despite seemingly intractable capitalist and imperialist hegemony, point to a reinvigorated revolutionary consciousness among the global population. In a world of capitalist degradation, Prashad declares: "A politics to produce dignity is a socialist politics…. Capitalism inherently generates forms of inequality and indignity. Therefore, all undertakings that seek dignity for all are socialist projects."
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Debt as a Tool of Domination: The IMF’s New Loan and Argentina’s Subordination to Global Capital Article

Debt as a Tool of Domination: The IMF’s New Loan and Argentina’s Subordination to Global Capital

In a follow-up to their May 2024 article about the IMF'S vise-grip on Argentina's economy, David Barkin and Juan E. Santarcàngelo examine how recent events continue to shape the efforts of the global and domestic ruling classes to dominate Argentine society through debt, currency scams, and political malfeasance. Underlying all of this, they note, is the continued encroachment of the IMF on Argentina's sovereignty, aided and abetted by the far-right president Javier Milei.
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