Ecosocialist Bookshelf — January 2023

January 20, 2023
Issue 
ecosocialist bookshelf

Start the new year with these important new books for red-greens and green-reds. Compiled by editor Ian Angus.

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By Annie Proulx
Simon & Schuster, 2022
Pulitzer Prize winner Annie Proulx brings witness and research to the vitally important role wetlands play in preserving the environment — by storing the carbon emissions that accelerate climate change. Her wide-ranging and idiosyncratic account shows that fens, bogs, swamps and marine estuaries are crucial to the earth’s survival, and documents their systemic destruction in pursuit of profit.


By Rob Wallace
Monthly Review Press, 2023
After half a million people died from COVID-19 during former United States President Donald Trump’s administration, Joe Biden promised a science-driven course correction, but, a little more than a year later, another half-a-million Americans were killed by the virus. What happened? Evolutionary epidemiologist Rob Wallace catalogs the Biden administration’s failures in controlling the outbreak. He also shows that, beyond matters of specific political persona or party, it was a decades-long structural decline associated with putting profits ahead of people that gutted US public health.


By Alexandre Antonelli
University of Chicago Press, 2022
As climate change, habitat loss and other threats have placed almost one-fifth of all species on Earth at risk of extinction in the coming decades, a deeper understanding of biodiversity has never been more important. Brazilian-born scientist Alexandre Antonelli shows what’s at stake in the fight to protect and restore biodiversity, but also what can and should be done now to protect our planet and ourselves for the future.


By Walter Rodney
Verso, 2022
Walter Rodney, author of the brilliant How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, was an insightful revolutionary figure in the Pan-African and socialist movements of the 1960s and 1970s. This is a valuable collection of his essays on a wide range of subjects, but unfortunately, the editors provide no information on when or where the essays were first published, making it impossible to understand how they fit into Rodney’s personal development or the history of the period.


By David Michael Smith
Monthly Review Press, 2023
The US Empire has relied upon an almost unimaginable loss of life, from its inception to the present. Smith demonstrates that mass deaths, far from being unfortunate exceptions to an otherwise benign historical record, have been indispensable in the rise of the wealthiest and most powerful imperium in the history of the world. At the same time, Smith points to an extraordinary history of resistance by Indigenous peoples, people of African descent, workers and democratic-minded people around the world.


By Guglielmo Carchedi & Michael Roberts
Pluto Press, 2023
Two noted Marxist economists show how Marx’s law of value explains numerous issues in our modern world. In both advanced economies and the periphery, value theory provides a piercing analytical framework through which we can approach topics as varied as labour, profitability, automation and AI, the environment, nature and ecology, the role of China, imperialism and the state.

[Reprinted from . Inclusion of a book does not imply endorsement.]

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