
“Vital” geopolitical ambitions
By TARSUS GENUS: Donald Trump, who, having been elected President of his country, showed his unbridled arrogance, transforming the American election into a plebiscite to govern the world
By TARSUS GENUS: Donald Trump, who, having been elected President of his country, showed his unbridled arrogance, transforming the American election into a plebiscite to govern the world
By MOYSES PINTO NETO: The left's idea is that people are empty vessels searching for meaning in their material tensions, but this underestimates the realm of desire and the myths that revolve around it.
By FERNANDO SARTI FERREIRA: The “revolution of order” only gains traction where the most relevant progressive and left-wing groups are defeated or transformed into guarantors of order
By MICHEL FOUCAULT: Transcript of a course at USP, given in October 1975
By EUGENIO BUCCI: Zuckerberg climbed into the back of the extremist Trumpist truck, without shame, without limping and with a jolt. Meta came out of its silicon closet to enter the frenzied fanaticism
By RICHARD SEYMOUR: Real crises are proliferating, but disaster nationalism is feeding on entirely fictitious crises
By DEMIAN BEZERRA DE MELO: Foreword to David Renton's newly published book
By EDUARDO VASCO: The double standard behind Josep Borrell's apparent humanism
By IGOR MENDES: Excerpt, selected by the author, from the Afterword to the new edition of the recently released book
By THIAGO BLOSS DE ARAÚJO: Under fascism, it is not a question of “another suicide”, but of a suicided person, or, more precisely, of a suicider
By BRUNO MACHADO: The dispute over narratives that has been taking place in Brazilian political life has been guided by PT reformism for two decades and this may have reinforced the public image of the left as a defender of the State and taxes
By CARLOS DE NICOLA: As the Brazilian left has a structural difficulty in vocalizing possible solutions, “morbid symptoms” are embodied in characters, and compete for the popular imagination in a regressive way
By MARGA FERRÉ: The rise of the far right in the last decade is a reaction, and a global reaction at that. But a reaction to what?
By SAMIR GANDESHA: The standardization that lies at the heart of the culture industry harmonizes perfectly with a key attribute of authoritarian personalities, namely: “stereotypy” and “childish desire for endless and unchanging repetition”
By HUGO DIONÍSIO: The connection between the ethnic conflict with the Russian-speaking and Russian populations, the Soviet past and the memory of the victory over Nazi-fascism, has its origins in the wave of collaborationism and sympathy with Nazi ideology.
By ODILON BOILER NETO: The way of creating and transforming the world — especially in genocidal transformation — is not an act of barbarity absolutely removed from us by time, space or moral values.
By TARSO GENRO: The web of financial capital, the arms industry and rentier accumulation begins to dominate the meaning of democratic liberalism and thus definitively guide people towards individualism without care.
By JULIAN RODRIGUES: Pablo Marçal represents the pinnacle of far-right ideas, hyperneoliberal culture and antidemocratic authoritarianism
By TARSUS GENUS: Donald Trump, who, having been elected President of his country, showed his unbridled arrogance, transforming the American election into a plebiscite to govern the world
By MOYSES PINTO NETO: The left's idea is that people are empty vessels searching for meaning in their material tensions, but this underestimates the realm of desire and the myths that revolve around it.
By FERNANDO SARTI FERREIRA: The “revolution of order” only gains traction where the most relevant progressive and left-wing groups are defeated or transformed into guarantors of order
By MICHEL FOUCAULT: Transcript of a course at USP, given in October 1975
By EUGENIO BUCCI: Zuckerberg climbed into the back of the extremist Trumpist truck, without shame, without limping and with a jolt. Meta came out of its silicon closet to enter the frenzied fanaticism
By RICHARD SEYMOUR: Real crises are proliferating, but disaster nationalism is feeding on entirely fictitious crises
By DEMIAN BEZERRA DE MELO: Foreword to David Renton's newly published book
By EDUARDO VASCO: The double standard behind Josep Borrell's apparent humanism
By IGOR MENDES: Excerpt, selected by the author, from the Afterword to the new edition of the recently released book
By THIAGO BLOSS DE ARAÚJO: Under fascism, it is not a question of “another suicide”, but of a suicided person, or, more precisely, of a suicider
By BRUNO MACHADO: The dispute over narratives that has been taking place in Brazilian political life has been guided by PT reformism for two decades and this may have reinforced the public image of the left as a defender of the State and taxes
By CARLOS DE NICOLA: As the Brazilian left has a structural difficulty in vocalizing possible solutions, “morbid symptoms” are embodied in characters, and compete for the popular imagination in a regressive way
By MARGA FERRÉ: The rise of the far right in the last decade is a reaction, and a global reaction at that. But a reaction to what?
By SAMIR GANDESHA: The standardization that lies at the heart of the culture industry harmonizes perfectly with a key attribute of authoritarian personalities, namely: “stereotypy” and “childish desire for endless and unchanging repetition”
By HUGO DIONÍSIO: The connection between the ethnic conflict with the Russian-speaking and Russian populations, the Soviet past and the memory of the victory over Nazi-fascism, has its origins in the wave of collaborationism and sympathy with Nazi ideology.
By ODILON BOILER NETO: The way of creating and transforming the world — especially in genocidal transformation — is not an act of barbarity absolutely removed from us by time, space or moral values.
By TARSO GENRO: The web of financial capital, the arms industry and rentier accumulation begins to dominate the meaning of democratic liberalism and thus definitively guide people towards individualism without care.
By JULIAN RODRIGUES: Pablo Marçal represents the pinnacle of far-right ideas, hyperneoliberal culture and antidemocratic authoritarianism