“The bottom line isn't the whole thing”: Detroit, anti-racism and labour history New Beginnings interviews a Detroit militant with decades of organizing experience in the area.
Burnsall strike: with friends like these, who needs racists? Subversion criticise the Burnsall strike support group for making the dispute into a racial issue as opposed to a class issue. The article is an example of 'anti-racism' and 'anti-nationalism' turning into a refusal to discuss racial divisions within the working class at all, which we strongly disagree with but reproduce for reference. See our archive on the Burnsall strike.
What's wrong with anti-racism? Subversion critique bourgeois anti-racism. We don't agree with how all of this article is written, but reproduce it for reference.
Proletarian Gob special issue: The corpse of the millennium An issue of anti-state communist magazine Proletarian Gob in which they reprint an article on Darwin…
Reviews of Two Books on the 1960s Black Liberation Movement - Curtis Price Review of "The Rise and Fall of California's Radical Prison Movement" and "The Black Panther Party…
"You've Struck a Rock." Gender and Transformation in the US and South Africa - M. Bahati Kuumba An article on women's crucial role in the US Civil Rights Movement and in the…
W. E. B. Du Bois and the Proletariat in Black Reconstruction - Ferruccio Gambino Italian autonomist Ferruccio Gambino on sociologist and historian W. E. B. Du Bois and the working…
“Speak out now when others grow silent”: The Messenger, the IWW and debates over new negro radicalism - George Robertson An essay on the relationship between the IWW and A. Philip Randolph's The Messenger…
The condition of women in America, 1619-1851 - Howard Zinn Howard Zinn on the position of women and the struggles of working-class women for equality from the…
A people's history of the American revolution - Howard Zinn Howard Zinn's critical history of the American Revolution against British rule and its impact on…
1619-1741: Slavery and slave rebellion in the US - Howard Zinn Howard Zinn's history of slavery and slave revolts in the United States from 1619 up until 1741.