Latest News: Author Archive

“America isn’t really a middle-class nation, but Clinton to Obama, all relied on the myth” — THE SINKING MIDDLE CLASS excerpt published in ThePrint

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020

In ‘The Sinking Middle Class’, David Roediger writes about how Democrats and Republicans praise the middle-class as America’s heart. But numbers tell a different story.

Read the excerpt here.

“Decoding QAnon: From Pizzagate to Kanye to Marina Abramovic, this conspiracy covers everything” — CHAMELEO author Robert Guffey writes for Salon

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020
The QAnon universe: A D.C. pizzeria with children in the basement and an art-world celebrity aligned with Satan

Read the article here.

“Each election year, politicians make endless appeals for the votes of the middle class. But who, and what, is the middle class?” — THE SINKING MIDDLE CLASS author David Roediger interviewed on Against the Grain

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020
David Roediger looks at the political history of an unwieldy category, from its Cold War role as a bulwark against Communism to the Democratic Party’s rebranding of working class voters to the radical left’s understanding of the middle class or classes.

Listen here.

“I danced in the streets after Allende’s victory in Chile 50 years ago. Now I see its lessons for today” — CAUTIVOS author Ariel Dorfman writes for the Los Angeles Times

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020
Fifty years ago today, on the night of Sept. 4, 1970, I was dancing, along with a multitude of others, in the streets of Santiago de Chile. We were celebrating the election of Salvador Allende, the first democratically elected socialist leader in the world.

Read the article here.

“Lessons for the US, 50 Years After Allende’s Socialist Revolution in Chile” — CAUTIVOS author Ariel Dorfman interviewed on Democracy Now!

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020

“Mike Davis: Coronavirus is just the start, we are now in the age of pandemics” — THE MONSTER ENTERS author Mike Davis interviewed on RT

Tuesday, September 8th, 2020

“How to defend murder while presenting yourself as neutral” — AMERICAN MONSTROSITY author Nathan J. Robinson writes for Current Affairs

Monday, August 31st, 2020
Your Oppression Was Predictable

Read the article here.

“Making sense of QAnon: What lies behind the conspiracy theory that’s eating America?” — CHAMELEO author Robert Guffey writes for Salon

Monday, August 31st, 2020
QAnon’s deranged theories are drawn from numerous sources — and contain tidbits of truth. But what’s the point?

Read the article here.

“Political exploitation of ‘middle class’ examined in new book” — THE SINKING MIDDLE CLASS author David R. Roediger interviewed for KU Today

Monday, August 31st, 2020
There was a time when politicians didn’t pay much attention to the middle class.

Or at least politicians didn’t claim they did.

“Through the 19th century, almost nobody self-consciously thought about themselves as middle class,” said David Roediger, the Foundation Professor of American Studies at the University of Kansas. “The mass embrace of the term is kind of a Cold War product. And it didn’t really enter U.S. presidential politics until the 1990s.”

His latest book, “The Sinking Middle Class: A Political History,” refutes the concept that the United States is a middle-class nation while tracing the history of how the designation became a vote-pandering issue for rival parties. Published by OR Books on Oct. 8, advance copies are currently available.

Read the full interview here.

“Dale Jamieson on the politics of global warming and the notion of tipping points” — LOVE IN THE ANTHROPOCENE co-author interviewed on Against the Grain

Thursday, August 27th, 2020

Listen here.

“Truly sustainable energy production will only be possible if power is taken out of the hands of gargantuan profit-seeking corporations like ConEd and their flunkeys in the halls of state” — PEOPLE’S POWER author Ashley Dawson writes for the Indypendent

Thursday, August 27th, 2020

Eight-hundred and sixty thousand people lost power when Tropical Storm Isaias hit New York City in early August. It did not have to be this way. Isaias was not a particularly potent storm. The blackout was a product of the decrepit state of the city’s electric grid and the failure of investor-owned electric utility Consolidated Edison, New York’s monopoly power supplier, to put public interest over private profit.

Read the full article here.

“The Last Thing Libya Needs Is an Intensification of a U.S. Proxy War” — THE WRONG STORY author Greg Shupak writes for In These Times

Tuesday, August 25th, 2020

We must stop our government from treating Libya like its own private battleground.

Read the article here.

“The deep, twisted roots of QAnon: From 1940s sci-fi to 19th-century anti-Masonic agitprop” — CHAMELEO author Robert Guffey writes for Salon

Tuesday, August 25th, 2020
The QAnon delusions aren’t even original: Fantasies about demon-cannibal conspiracies go back at least 150 years

Read the article here.

“The 10 Hottest Climate Change Books of Summer” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS featured on EcoWatch

Tuesday, August 25th, 2020
In this hybrid book of nonfiction, fiction, essays and poems, an all-star lineup of international writers addresses how climate change will exacerbate the gap between rich and poor around the world and put millions of people at greater risk. Margaret Atwood, Anuradha Roy, Lauren Groff and Chinelo Okparanta are among the notable contributors.

See the full list here.

“For anyone interested in the Middle East… Essential reading.” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP reviewed by the Times

Monday, August 24th, 2020
Soaked in blood, sectarian strife & fanaticism, mired in Great Power hypocrisy & betrayal, this may not be everyone’s idea of feelgood lockdown literature but for anyone interested in the Middle East it is essential reading.

Read the full review (with subscription) here.

“An accessible, often engrossing, introduction to the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East.” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP reviewed by Peace News

Monday, August 24th, 2020
There is much of interest to peace activists in the book. For example, those who wonder if Western air strikes were the only option for dealing with ISIS will be interested to read that NATO member Turkey allowed around 40,000 ISIS fighters to cross its border into ISIS territory.

Cockburn is also keen to highlight the skewed, propagandistic nature of much mainstream news reporting of the wars, noting ‘copious media coverage of civilian casualties caused by Syrian and Russian airstrikes’ in Aleppo and Ghouta (both in Syria).

Read the full review here.

“Must-read… An insightful account of how the aggressive policies promoted by President Trump are destabilising the [Middle East].” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP reviewed by Morning Star

Monday, August 24th, 2020
The latest book from veteran Middle East correspondent Patrick Cockburn presents a detailed analysis of key events in the Middle East since Trump’s election.The major themes are the ever-deepening confrontation between the US and Iran, the defeat of Isis in Iraq and Syria and the incredibly complex relationship between the different Kurdish factions and the US.

Cockburn’s rare quality as a journalist is his insistence on engaging in actual journalism by doing the hard work of uncovering evidence and trying to make sense of contrasting narratives, as opposed to simply picking up on the Tweets and press releases of a few “reliable” (pro-Western) sources, as is the way of so many.

Read the full review here.

“A well-placed critique of both an inept presidency and an uncritical media.” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP reviewed by Kirkus Reviews

Monday, August 24th, 2020
The award-winning British journalist analyzes and criticizes Donald Trump’s handling of wars in the Middle East and Asia.

Independent Middle East correspondent Cockburn opens as he closes, with an account of the assassination of Iranian military strategist and supposed terrorist Qasem Soleimani, which was followed by a declaration that the Islamic State had been defeated and by the abandonment of America’s Kurdish allies in Syria. The author considers Soleimani less a threat than the administration believed, though his killing provided a convenient martyr around whom Iran could plant a flag. There’s a schizophrenia at play here; writes Cockburn, “the US has always been keen to hide the degree to which it has been Iran’s de facto partner, as well as its rival, ever since Saddam Hussein…invaded Kuwait in 1990.” Many of Trump’s moves seem calculated to improve Iran’s standing in the region: “It does not take very much to destabilize Iraq and the signs are that Trump does not care if he does.” IS seems to be flourishing, mounting attacks on peace demonstrators in Turkey, blowing up a Moscow-bound airliner, attacking a mosque in Egypt, and detonating a suicide bomb beside a Pakistani polling place—“not to mention,” adds Cockburn, “the eight killed in the UK in 2017 after a van drove into pedestrians on London Bridge.” Cockburn gives Trump some credit for attempting to project American power less with military strength than with “commercial and economic” blandishments. He further reserves some of his critical asperity for journalists who are too willing to accept party lines, though he allows that a reporter in the field lacks the clout of the suits back home: “Usually, it is…the home office or media herd instinct that decides the story of the day.” Even so, his own reporting on the ground, interwoven into his narrative, proves the power of a well-informed and serious pen.

A well-placed critique of both an inept presidency and an uncritical media.

Read the review here.

“A nuanced, deeply informed account of recent events in the Middle East.” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP reviewed by Publishers Weekly

Monday, August 24th, 2020
Cockburn (The Age of Jihad), a foreign correspondent for the Independent, delivers a nuanced, deeply informed account of recent events in the Middle East. Chronicling the period from the 2016–2017 Battle of Mosul to the assassination of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani in January 2020, Cockburn details tensions between Iran and the U.S., fallout from Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen, and the “rise and fall of de facto Kurdish states in Iraq and Syria,” among other inflection points. Though careful to note that the forces reshaping the Middle East are larger than any one U.S. president, Cockburn faults the Trump administration for changing policies on a whim, believing in “self-serving conspiracy theories,” and being “peculiarly ill-equipped” to deal with the complexities of the region. He also notes parallels between Trump and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan, including “manic sensitivity to criticism,” and takes the White House to task for failing to stop “the ethnic cleansing of Kurds by Turkey” after U.S. troops withdrew from northeastern Syria. Balancing on-the-ground reporting with big-picture analysis, Cockburn writes with deep empathy for the people whose lives have been reshaped by these events. Readers with a deep interest in the Middle East will appreciate this incisive look behind the headlines.

Read the review here.

“New York City Will Never Be the Same Again—And It Shouldn’t Be” — PEOPLE’S POWER author Ashley Dawson writes with Aurash Khawarzad for the Verso Blog

Friday, August 21st, 2020
The compound crises of long-term environmental pollution, decades of economic disinvestment, and a pandemic proving especially deadly for working-class people forced to congregate indoors at home or on the job, make for a deadly intersection in a handful of New York City neighborhoods. The hot city is quite literally a killer.

Read the piece here.

“From Humble Beginnings to New York’s ‘Upper Echelons,’ Tali Weinstein Sets Her Sights On the Manhattan DA’s Office” — BERNIE’S BROOKLYN author Theodore Hamm interviews Tali Weinstein for the Indypendent

Friday, August 21st, 2020
Tali Weinstein immigrated to the United States from Iran as a young child in 1979. Her early law career included work as a clerk for Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. During the Obama administration, she served as counsel to Attorney General Eric Holder.
Most recently, Weinstein served as counsel to Brooklyn DA Eric Gonzalez. She also teaches courses at NYU Law School including “Criminal Justice Reform and the District Attorney.”

Read the interview here.

“Concise, disturbing, and valuable.” — THE MONSTER ENTERS reviewed by PopMatters

Friday, August 21st, 2020

Mike Davis’ COVID-era update about emerging flu pandemics, The Monster Enters, is concise, disturbing, and valuable.

Read the review here.

“Essential reading… [Pamela Cohn’s] clear courage to converse freely and without pretension allows her to unearth candid insights into the beauty and struggles of the creative impulse.” — LUCID DREAMING reviewed by Documentary Magazine

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
Pamela Cohn’s “Lucid Dreaming” Offers Inspiration and Insight for Nonfiction Storytellers
The joy of human-to-human dialogue about the creative process is the heart of Pamela Cohn’s book, Lucid Dreaming: Conversations with 29 Filmmakers. Cohn, whose lengthy list of nonfiction film accomplishments span writing, commentary, curation and filmmaking itself, used her own archive of filmmaker interviews, as well as new conversations, to assemble an eclectic collection of voices from across the global documentary landscape. While most of the independent artists featured may not be top-of-mind filmmakers in the industry (working largely, as Cohn notes, “in virtual obscurity”), all have achieved significant recognition for their creative work. Indeed, the interviews contained within this 280-page book reveal a deep commitment among the artists featured to expanding the nonfiction form, whether for political engagement, intimate reflection, artistic possibility or other meaningful pursuits.

Read the full review here.

UPCOMING WEBINAR: “Alta Asks Live: John Freeman” — TALES OF TWO PLANETS editor in conversation with Mary Melton

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
Sep 16, 2020 12:30 PM Pacific Standard Time (US and Canada)

More details here.

“Matt Taibbi on the Origins of the Russiagate Hoax” — THE BUSINESS SECRETS OF DRUG DEALING author interviewed for Antiwar.com

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
A New Whistleblower Exposes the ‘Cambridge Four’

Read the interview here.

“Iran-Iraq War: How a forgotten conflict still shapes Middle East politics to this day” — WAR IN THE AGE OF TRUMP author Patrick Cockburn writes for the Independent

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
Revulsion at atrocities committed is not the only reason for seeming worldwide amnesia about the eight-year conflict, Patrick Cockburn writes.

Read the article here.

“A must-read for contemporary writers interested in radical change” — THE DEEP END reviewed by Morning Star

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
[Jason] Boog makes excellent use of historical analogy to demonstrate that contemporary writers are heading into an “economic vacuum” of the same order as the Great Depression… A refreshingly honest, and incisively well-informed literary history.

Read the full review here.

“The post office is at the center of the latest moral panic, but how can readers tell what’s worth a real freakout anymore?” — THE BUSINESS SECRETS OF DRUG DEALING author Matt Taibbi writes on Substack

Thursday, August 20th, 2020

The Press that Cried Wolf

The post office’s journey from America’s most serially-ignored public institution to subject of a massive international sympathy campaign – the U.S.P.S. is currently the world’s largest baby trapped at the bottom of the world’s largest well – is the latest bizarro development of the Trump years, when news coverage has devolved into a never-ending procession of moral panics, some real, some less so. Which is this?

Read the full article (with subscription) here.

“Trump wants to destroy USPS. We can’t allow him to get away with it” — AMERICAN MONSTROSITY author Nathan Robinson writes for the Guardian

Thursday, August 20th, 2020
Trump is going to try to turn the agency into the villain of the story, because the USPS’s popularity is one of the reasons it has been relatively safe

Read the article here.

“Why We Campaign to ‘Save the Middle Class’ and Shouldn’t” — THE SINKING MIDDLE CLASS author David R. Roediger writes for New Politics

Tuesday, August 18th, 2020
“By the late 1990s,” the organizer Jane McAlevey recalled, “I sat through numerous sessions where well-known national pollsters instructed labor leaders to replace the word working class with middle class.” Soon many labor leaders needed little reminding. Nevertheless, McAlevey’s point that the language of “saving the middle class” gained traction through electoral politics stands and her mention of the 90s nails the periodization. Earlier electoral appeals to the middle class had worked locally, mostly in the context of right-wing anti-tax and anti-integration initiatives, but it was the Bill Clinton victories during the 90s that made those appeals national and bipartisan. His pollster, Stanley Greenberg, famously made “middle class dreams” the key to progressive electioneering. The understanding of race and of class in political debates and among social movements has suffered for it.

Read the full article here.

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