Contributions by:

chrismorda

The Revolution is Upon Us: The Age of Crisis and the End of Homo Economicus

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The present economic collapse is likely only the opening salvo of a much longer and broader age of crises. This period will produce changes at least as profound as those that marked the transition from feudal society to capitalism. It will change virtually everything about the way we live our lives. It will, in short,…

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From Revolution to a New Global System: Reflections on the Breakdown of “Globalization” and the Future(s) of the International Order

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In Taking Power: On the Origins of Third World Revolutions John Foran tells us revolution may occur whenever “a world systemic opening” occurs.  “This may be the result of distraction in the core economies by world war or depression, rivalries between one or more core powers, mixed messages sent to Third World dictators, or a…

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Entering a Systemic Revolution

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The collapse of the United States as the global hegemon constitutes a “systemic revolution” that will transform both the U.S.and the rest of the globe. Such a  revolution is different from “normal” political revolutions, which entail an overthrow of the government. A systemic revolution ushers in even broader and more enduring changes in economy, society and…

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Class Rules: Utopia On Hold

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“Nothing that has ever happened should be regarded as lost for history” –Walter Benjamin History and Memoryistory is written by the victors. They define what counts as history, whatis remembered and what is forgotten, what is important and what is notand, most crucially, what is usable for informing the relationship of thepresent with the future.…

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The Swan Song of the Literary Missionary: Review of John le Carre’s The Mission Song

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While not the best of John le Carré’s novels, The Mission Song is certainly far ahead of his previous symbolic disaster, Absolute Friends, and once again proves that he is the master of the post-Cold War political thriller and factually way ahead of the pack. Shadow of the Zebra-crossing The story is narrated by one…

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Hearing Hannah: Listening to German-Language Recordings of Hannah Arendt from the 1950s and 60s

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Vorwort I did not go looking for Arendt’s voice.  An unexpected gift from Germany, from the woman who was my intellectual mentor in Gymnasium, brought five CDs of interviews, award speeches and lectures, brought Hannah Arendt’s voice across the ocean and across more than five decades into my living room last summer.  It was a…

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Robert Cohen’s Freedom’s Orator and Edward P. Morgan’s What Really Happened to the 1960s

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Robert Cohen,“Freedom’s Orator”: Mario Savio and the Radical Legacy of the 1960s (Oxford, 2009) Edward P. Morgan, What Really Happened to the 1960s: How Mass Media Culture Failed American Democracy (University Press of Kansas, 2010)   On 15 November 2011, at the same spot on the Berkeley campus where “freedom’s orator” emerged into history in…

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West Bank Settlements Obstruct Peace: Israel’s Empire State Building

from Logos 1.4 – Fall 2002 Why is it so hard to make peace in the Middle East? The greatest barrier is the Israeli settlements—these are both the motivation and engine of the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. Three decades of objections from the United States and Europe have achieved nothing. The rapid expansion of Israeli settlements—all illegal—has…

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