Summer, Fall
"If I am, then I am lost. If I am lost, someone will take me home." Poetry by Sanna Wani.
"If I am, then I am lost. If I am lost, someone will take me home." Poetry by Sanna Wani.
Ian Liujia Tian on truck drivers’ strikes in China, and the role played in that militancy by those drivers’ wives (Kasao 卡嫂).
Patty Krawec on religious nationalisms, kinship versus citizenship, and Land Back as an alternative to the violence of colonial borders.
Vincent Wong on building a socialist internationalism able to do justice to all our contradictory concepts of “home.”
Leslie Epp on anti-work politics, their appeal and their limits, and how they relate to building working-class power.
David Camfield on how the new cooperation deal between the New Democratic Party and the Liberal Party further winnows the Anglo-Canadian parliamentary field into a contest between the “liberal establishment” and the “conservative opposition,” with bad consequences for the left.
Mostafa Henaway on Amazon’s insidious labour model, its continuities and ruptures with shop-floor dynamics of earlier decades, and how to fight it.
In a review essay about Bini Adamczak’s book Yesterday’s Tomorrow, Tomás Ó Loingsigh asks how we might reckon critically and productively with communist history – the history not of an abstraction, but of a political project that has acted in the world.
"War is irreconcilable with the essential values and goals of the feminist movement. We stand for peace, coexistence of peoples, and a democratic solution to conflicts." A statement by Feminist Anti-War Resistance.
"The blaze is the baptism, sometimes, & sometimes the requiem." A new poem by stevie redwood.