Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Verso Books

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  • av McKenzie Wark
    224,-

    A memoir of transition, politics and memory

  • av Costas Lapavitsas
    144,-

    A myth-busting pamphlet that charts a course out of the current cost of living crisis

  • av Anna Biller
    194,-

    Bluebeard gets a feminist Gothic makeover in this subversive take on the famous French fairy tale—from the acclaimed director of The Love Witch, and for fans of Jane Eyre

  • av Matteo Pasquinelli
    256,-

    A "social" history of AI that finally reveals its roots in the spatial computation of industrial factories and the surveillance of collective behaviour.

  • av Nick Dearden
    274,-

    How Big Pharma failed to end a pandemic, and what it tells us about the global economy

  • av Ralph Dutli
    296,-

    The personal and political life of the iconic Russian poet Osip Mandelstam is graphically portrayed in this lavishly illustrated book

  • av R. Trebor Scholz
    224,-

    What if taxi drivers in New York City or rickshaw operators in Bangalore could start a worker-owned and-operated alternative to Uber with stable hourly wages?

  • av Danny Dorling
    224,-

    Britain is broken, but how did it become so divided?

  • av Anton Jäger
    174,-

    The operative term for modern politics is "populist"

  • av Maurice Godelier
    164,-

    Exploring the role of the incest prohibition in human societies

  • av Vigdis Hjorth
    194,-

    To mother is to murder, or close enough', thinks Johanna, as she looks at the spelling of the two words in Norwegian. She's recently widowed and back in Oslo after a long absence as she prepares for a retrospective of her art. The subject of her work is motherhood and some of her more controversial paintings have brought aboiut a dramatic rift between parent and child. This new proximity, after decades of acrimonius absence, set both women on edge, and before too long Johanna finds her mother stalking her thoughts, and Johanna starts stalking her mother's house.

  • av David Lester
    194,-

    The revolutionary life of an eighteenth-century dwarf activist who was among the first to fight against slavery and animal cruelty

  • av Marcus Rediker
    194,-

  • av Geoff Eley
    422,-

    How History has changed in the half-century since the 1960s

  • av Robin Blackburn
    427,-

    How was slavery defeated in the Americas? The Reckoning is Robin Blackburn’s compelling and authoritative account

  • av Jack Norton
    194,-

    A VITAL COLLECTION FROM A KEY BATTLEGROUND IN THE ABOLITION STRUGGLE: THE COUNTY JAIL

  • av Tom Stevenson
    250,-

    The destructive delusions of ‘Global Britain’

  • av CLR James
    224,-

    Longlisted for the American Library in Paris Book AwardWinner of the American Book AwardWinner of the PEN Oakland Josephine Miles AwardPERHAPS THE GREATEST VICTORY OF THE OPPRESSED OVER THEIR OPPRESSORS IN ALL HISTORY

  • av Gwenola Ricordeau
    262,-

    An indispensable guide to the feminist case for prison abolition

  • av Pier Paolo Pasolini
    224,-

    First collection on filmmaker and poet Pasolini's passion for painting

  • av Rebecca Ruth Gould
    175,-

    How the redefinition of antisemitism has functioned as a tactic to undermine Palestine solidarity

  • av Rachel O'Dwyer
    239,-

    The essential guide to this new landscape of NFTs, Web3, Crypto and DAOs and a warning of the political consequences of what happens when platform capitalism comes for the money in your pocket.

  • av Benjamin Kunkel
    284,-

    What ecological politics should the left propose?

  • av Brigitte Studer
    394,-

    Hope, Struggle and Defeat: The Communist International and the Global Fight for Freedom

  • av Itamar Viera Junior
    174,-

    Heralded as the most important Brazilian novel of the century so far, this bestseller's unique blend of magic and social realism won it three literary awards and global acclaim

  • av Eric Hazan
    122,-

    How the French invented the barricade,and its symbolic impact on popular protests throughout historyIn the history of European revolutions, the barricade stands as a glorious emblem. Its symbolic importance arises principally from the barricades of Eric Hazan's native Paris, where they were instrumental in the revolts of the nineteenth century, helping to shape the political life of a continent. The barricade was always a makeshift construction (the word derives from barrique or barrel), and in working-class districts these ersatz fortifications could spread like wildfire. They doubled as a stage, from which insurgents could harangue soldiers and subvert their allegiance. Their symbolic power persisted into May 1968 and, more recently, the Occupy movements. Hazan traces the many stages in the barricade's evolution, from the Wars of Religion through to the Paris Commune, drawing on the work of thinkers throughout the periods examined to illustrate and bring to life the violent practicalities of revolutionary uprising.

  • av Kevin Ochieng Okoth
    144,-

    We still have a lot to learn from the politics of Eduardo Mondlane, Amílcar Cabral, Walter Rodney, Andrée Blouin. We might yet build something new from their political thought, something which clings on to the utopian promise of freedom and refuses to let go. ‘Provocative and polemical, Red Africa probes the limits of contemporary discourses of Black studies and returns to the neglected histories of Marxism on the continent, finding resources for charting new emancipatory futures’ - Adom Getachew, author of Worldmaking after Empire ‘A fiercely argued case for looking to the anticolonialism and Marxism of Red Africa in our current engagements with decolonisation. Okoth’s critical assessment of certain variants of "decolonial studies" and "Afro-pessimism" is welcome’ - Priyamvada Gopal, author of Insurgent Empire ‘This is an important defence of the emancipatory politics of Eduardo Mondlane, Amilcar Cabral, Frantz Fanon and Walter Rodney from the reactionary perspectives of Afro-pessimism and African nationalism, raising the question of whether things might indeed have turned out differently had radical women such as Andrée Blouin been more intimately connected with the struggle for self-determination’ - Firoze Manji, co-editor of Claim No Easy Victories: The Legacy of Amilcar Cabral

  • av Marcus Verhagen
    197,-

    Contemporary art and the culture of speed

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