Monthly Review Press

New! “Value Chains: The New Economic Imperialism”

New! “Value Chains: The New Economic Imperialism”

Winner of the 2018 Paul M. Sweezy – Paul A. Baran Memorial Award for original work regarding the political economy of imperialism, Intan Suwandi’s Value Chains examines the exploitation of labor in the Global South. Focusing on the issue of labor within global value chains—vast networks of people, tools, and activities needed to deliver goods and services to the market and controlled by multinationals—Suwandi offers a deft empirical analysis of unit labor costs that is closely related to Marx’s own theory of exploitation.

How Jazz Survived White Supremacy: Gerald Horne talks to Truthout about “Jazz and Justice”

How Jazz Survived White Supremacy: Gerald Horne talks to Truthout about “Jazz and Justice”

Certainly, being a ‘jazz’ musician in the first decades of the 20th century was probably the most dangerous profession in the arts and, along with coal mining, one of the most dangerous jobs of all. Inhaling cigarette smoke in dank clubs, being plied with alcohol and other controlled substances by unscrupulous bosses of clubs and record labels alike, being attacked violently by racist ‘fans’

Ian Angus on the Politics of Ecosocialism, via REBEL

Ian Angus on the Politics of Ecosocialism, via REBEL

Marx and Engels were deeply concerned about capitalism’s destruction of the natural world, including river and urban pollution, and the degradation of the soil that all life depends on. For them, the word ‘socialism’ included those concerns and the need to overcome them. But in the 20th Century, most socialist organisations treated such matters as secondary...

Gerald Horne talks to Black Perspectives about “Jazz and Justice”

Gerald Horne talks to Black Perspectives about “Jazz and Justice”

"I grew up in Jim Crow St. Louis with working class parents with roots in Mississippi. From an early age I recall a guitar in our house, that our father would pluck from time to time. Undoubtedly, my younger brother Marvin Horne—who has played with such giants as percussionists, Chico Hamilton and Elvin Jones, and as part of Aretha Franklin’s band just before she expired—was influenced to pick up this instrument because of its ubiquitous presence in our small house...."

Britain’s Communist Review considers Victor Grossman’s “A Socialist Defector”

Britain’s Communist Review considers Victor Grossman’s “A Socialist Defector”

For most of history, there was no ‘Germany’ as such – just a ragbag of German-speaking states. In 1871, most of them unified into the German Empire (Austria stayed outside, together with Switzerland, where German is but one of the languages spoken). ¶ Germany came late to the capitalist table, and flexed its muscles in the early 20th century with the aim of becoming a major imperialist power. ...