Phillip W. Magness

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Phillip W. Magness



Average rating: 4.06 · 241 ratings · 40 reviews · 13 distinct worksSimilar authors
The 1619 Project: A Critique

4.13 avg rating — 168 ratings — published 2020 — 3 editions
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The Modern Scholar: Rules o...

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3.84 avg rating — 37 ratings — published 2012
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Colonization After Emancipa...

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3.63 avg rating — 19 ratings — published 2011 — 3 editions
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Two Treatises on Competitiv...

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4.67 avg rating — 6 ratings2 editions
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The 1619 Project Myth

4.50 avg rating — 4 ratings2 editions
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The Best of Karl Marx

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3.33 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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Public Letters and Politica...

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4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings2 editions
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From Tariffs to the Income ...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2011
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Journal of the Abraham Linc...

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Marxism and the Intellectuals

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“Instead, Hannah-Jones took on this subject herself or assigned specific themes from this period to non-experts, such as Princeton sociologist Matthew Desmond who wrote an accompanying piece on the economics of slavery despite having no scholarly competencies in that subject.”
Phillip W. Magness, The 1619 Project: A Critique

“At this point it would be accurate to conclude that the reputation of the project’s other essays, many of them entirely unobjectionable adaptations of scholarly insights for a popular audience, has suffered because of the Times’ inflexible refusal to address erroneous historical claims in the essays by Hannah-Jones and Desmond.”
Phillip W. Magness, The 1619 Project: A Critique

“Neoliberalism is essentially an intentionally imprecise stand-in term for free market economics, for economic sciences in general, for conservatism, for libertarians and anarchists, for authoritarianism and militarism, for advocates of the practice of commodification, for center-left or market-oriented progressivism, for globalism and welfare state social democracies, for being in favor of or against increased immigration, for favoring trade and globalization or opposing the same, or for really any set of political beliefs that happen to be disliked by the person(s) using the term.”
Phillip W. Magness

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