9 episodes

A podcast by Historical Materialism on critical Marxist theory. The podcast offers a deep-dive into each new issue of the Historical Materialism Journal. With Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar. Music by Thijs Keulen. Artwork by David Mabb.

Historical Materialism Podcast Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar

    • Gesellschaft und Kultur

A podcast by Historical Materialism on critical Marxist theory. The podcast offers a deep-dive into each new issue of the Historical Materialism Journal. With Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar. Music by Thijs Keulen. Artwork by David Mabb.

    HM9: Racecraft

    HM9: Racecraft

    How does racialisation shape the labour process? How is race formed in the transition from slavery to wage labour? What is the role of racecraft in wage labour exploitation? Looking at the history of the Siddis, 'liberated' East African slaves settled in the Indian subcontinent, helps answer these questions. In this episode, Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar interview Tania Bhattacharyya from the University of Cambridge about Tania's article Steam and Stokehold: Steamship Labour, Colonial Racecraft and Bombay's Sidi jamāt from the Race and Capital special issue of the HM journal.

    • 1 hr 14 min
    HM8: Palestine

    HM8: Palestine

    What is the role of Israeli settler colonialism on Palestinian agriculture? How is indigeneity invoked in the commodification of land and produce? How does land matter for the Palestinian struggle for liberation? In this episode, Ashok Kumar and Lukas Slothuus speak with Gabi Kirk from California Poly State University about her article Commodifying Indigeneity? Settler Colonialism and Racial Capitalism in Fair Trade Farming in Palestine [https://www.historicalmaterialism.org/articles/commodifying-indigeneity] from the 31.2 issue of the Historical Materialism Journal.

    • 1 hr 21 min
    HM7: Marxism and Health

    HM7: Marxism and Health

    What does the Covid-19 pandemic tell us about the relationship between humans and nature? And how can eco-Marxism help us understand the pandemic? What does a Marxist account of health look like? In this episode, Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar speak with Jacopo Nicola Bergamo from the University of Vigo about his article Pandemic Capitalism: Metabolic Rift, World-Ecology Crossing Dialectical Biology [https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/31/1/article-p93_3.xml]. The article is in the 31.1 issue of the Historical Materialism [https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/31/1/hima.31.issue-1.xml]journal.

    • 1 hr 7 min
    HM6: Insurgent Universality

    HM6: Insurgent Universality

    How can we trace a continuity with the past to inspire a future of emancipation? What can we learn from the experiments of the 1793 sans-culottes, the 1871 Paris Communards, the 1918 Soviet constitution, and the Zapatistas? Is modernity inherently oppressive? In this episode, Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar speak with Massimiliano Tomba, Professor of History of Consciousness at UC Santa Cruz about his article and book Insurgent University: An Alternative Legacy of Modernity. The article is in the 30.4 issue of the Historical Materialism journal.

    • 1 hr 14 min
    Landownership and Class

    Landownership and Class

    Are landowners a 'third class' beyond capitalists and workers? Or are landowners simply a class fraction of capitalists? How can tenants resist the power of the landowning class? In this episode, Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar talk with Francesca T.C. Manning, author of A Defence of the Concept of the Landowning Class as the Third Class: Towards a Logic of Landownership [https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/30/3/article-p79_3.xml]. The article is temporarily free to access and read.

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Marxism and the Climate Crisis

    Marxism and the Climate Crisis

    Can Marxism offer a convincing understanding of the present climate crisis? What is the metabolic rift? How have different Marxists – Marx, Engels, Lukács, and others – theorised the relationship between capitalism and nature? How can we understand nature in a dialectical way? In this episode, Lukas Slothuus and Ashok Kumar talk about these and further questions with John Bellamy Foster, Editor of Monthly Review and Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Oregon. John's article The Return of the Dialectics of Nature: The Struggle for Freedom as Necessity [https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/aop/article-10.1163-1569206X-20222279/article-10.1163-1569206X-20222279.xml] is based on his Deutscher Memorial Lecture. from the most recent journal issue 30.2 of Historical Materialism [https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/30/2/hima.30.issue-2.xml]. The article is open-access and free for all to download and read.

    Contributors:

    John Bellamy Foster [https://johnbellamyfoster.org]

    Lukas Slothuus [https://twitter.com/lslothuus]

    Ashok Kumar [https://twitter.com/broseph_stalin]

    Music by Thijs Keulen [https://soundcloud.com/thijskeulen]

    Artwork by David Mabb [https://www.gold.ac.uk/art/research/staff/dm/01/]

    Subscribe, share, and get involved with Historical Materialism [https://www.historicalmaterialism.org/]!

    • 1 hr 13 min

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