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Issue No. 42 | Summer 2021

The Working Class

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Our summer edition takes on the challenge of thinking about the big questions of agency in the 21st century.

Labor’s Long March

    The question is no longer whether the working class matters, but how it can fight back.

    Disorganized Democracy

    A coalition of industrial workers and small farmers underpinned democratic politics in the twentieth century. Can workers in a precarious service economy fill their shoes today?

    Fassbinder and the Red Army Faction

    As his fellow West German radicals began to embrace violence in the 1970s, legendary filmmaker Rainer Werner Fassbinder decided to celebrate another path for emancipation: class struggle in the workplace.

    Anthem of the Commoners

    Pulp’s 1995 hit “Common People” isn’t just a Britpop classic — it’s a more honest and brutal analysis of class than you’ll hear in the media today.

    Blue-Collar Jocks

    In the 1970s, sports movies were funny, bitter comedies about working-class jocks taking aim at both the front office and the rich.

    We Built the Golden Age

    The culture of British trade union militancy in auto plants like Austin Longbridge wasn’t the “natural” result of a Golden Age of capitalism — it came from organizing.