Jeremy Gilbert

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Jeremy Gilbert



Average rating: 3.76 · 405 ratings · 51 reviews · 17 distinct worksSimilar authors
Twenty-First Century Socialism

3.78 avg rating — 177 ratings3 editions
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Discographies: Dance, Music...

4.19 avg rating — 47 ratings — published 1999 — 13 editions
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Common Ground: Democracy an...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 2013 — 10 editions
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Anti-capitalism and Culture...

3.53 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 2008 — 9 editions
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Diana and Democracy

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1999
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Imperial Ecologies

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Medical Devices V: Proceedi...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2010
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Spaces and Stories (New For...

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How To Last Longer In Bed: ...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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Le hockey dans le sang: L'h...

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More books by Jeremy Gilbert…
Quotes by Jeremy Gilbert  (?)
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“Marxist writers are generally either indifferent or mildly hostile to the anti-capitalist movement, which they see as no good substitute for the great projects of communism and social democracy. Now, in one sense this is quite justified[…] However, there seems very little reason to believe that a return to the tactics of the twentieth-century labour movement is going to achieve anything in the future… [W]hat is wrong with commodification is not commodification per se… Marxist tradition goes much further than simply recommending that the excessive power of capital be challenged and curbed. Historically, this tradition tends to assert that such a challenge can only be made by virtue of a direct challenge to the existing relations of production, conceived of as the basis for a social totality, and, crucially, that it can only be made by the proletariat, politically mobilizes as a ‘Class of Itself’. In concrete terms, this means that only the labour movement, being organized and mobilized on the basis of its class identity and demanding the socialization of the means of production, can mount such a challenge… This is where I, and the anti-capitalist movement, part company with classical Marxism… [A]nti-capitalist movement is characterized by a certain pluralism, an unwillingness to impose any one model of social organization, and a refusal of neoliberal hegemony not on the basis of a single class identity or even a single universal human identity, but precisely n the basis of a defence of such pluralism against neoliberalism’s tyrannical monomania.”
jeremy gilbert, Anti-capitalism and Culture: Radical Theory and Popular Politics



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