editor Ian Angus presents six important new books on fungi, wheat, racism, building socialism and more.
By Guillaume Blanc
Polity Books, 2022
Africa鈥檚 national parks were created by European imperial powers forcibly evicting thousands of people from lands where they lived for centuries. Today, international conservation organisations continue to impose coercive models of 鈥渘ature protection鈥, displacing local people, restricting access to resources, and criminalising the use of the land. They are maintaining and extending a new type of imperial oppression: green colonialism.
By Alan G Morris
Wits University Press, 2021
When an ancient human skull was discovered in South Africa in 1913, scientists promptly labelled 鈥淏oskop Man鈥 a degenerate species, inferior in every way to Europeans. Morris鈥檚 history of anthropology in southern Africa shows that the supposed science was permeated by racist assumptions that justified the suppression of native populations and contributed to the establishment of apartheid.
By Keith Seifert
Greystone Books, 2022
Yeast, lichens, slimes聽and molds have evolved and adapted over millions of years, and they affect every aspect of the web of life. Canadian mycologist Keith Seifert traces the intricate connections between fungi and all life on Earth, showing how these remarkable microbes make life possible and at the same time kill over a million people every year. To live in harmony with nature, we must understand this hidden world.
By Marci R. Baranski
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2022
Norman Borlaug won a Nobel Prize for developing new seeds that increased production, but his seeds required expensive chemical fertilisers and irrigation, available only to wealthier farmers, leading to large-scale monocultures that replaced traditional farming practices. Baranski shows that the Green Revolution, by focusing on narrow technological methods, increased inequality and drove small farmers off the land.
By Pedro Ross
Monthly Review Press, 2022
Despite the collapse of its largest trading partner and a period of extreme privation, Cuba maintained its high life expectancy, low infant mortality, and universal access to health and education, preserving many of the gains of the revolution. The recovery was due to a massive grassroots campaign involving tens of thousands of meetings that mobilised the people to revolutionise nearly every aspect of life in Cuba. A rare, moving, on-the-ground account of a society mobilised from below, buttressing the Revolution when it was under maximum stress.
By Karl Marx
PM Press, 2022
A new annotated translation of Karl Marx鈥檚 1875 essay shows the full emancipatory scope of his notion of life after capitalism. This edition includes an extensive introduction by Peter Hudis, interpreting Marx鈥檚 arguments from the perspective of Marxist-humanism.
[Reprinted from . Inclusion of a book does not imply endorsement.]