1. The New Conservatism and the OldUniversities & Left Review, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Spring 1957)2. A Sense of Classlessness Universities & Left Review, No. 5 (Winter 1958)3. The Supply of DemandIn Out of Apathy, New Left Books/Stevens and Sons (1960)4. The Cuban Crisis: Trial-run or Steps towards Peace?War & Peace, Vol. 1, No. 1 (January-March 1963)5. Political Commitment In The Committed Church, Darton, Longman and Todd (1966)6. The First New Left: Life and Times In Out of Apathy (1990)7. A World at One with ItselfNew Society No. 403 (1970)8. Racism and Reaction In Five Views of Multi-Racial Britain, Commission for Racial Equality (1978)9. 1970: Selsdon Man: Birth of the Law and Order Society Written with C. Critcher, T. Jefferson, J. Clarke & B. Roberts From Chapter 9 of Policing the Crisis: 'Mugging', the State and Law and Order, Macmillan (1978)10. The Great Moving Right ShowMarxism Today, Vol. 23, No. 1 (January 1979)11. The 'Little Caesars' of Social DemocracyMarxism Today, Vol. 25, No. 4 (April 1981)12. The Empire Strikes Back New Socialist (July-August 1982)13. The Crisis of LabourismIn The Future of the Left, Polity Press/Basil Blackwell (1984) 14. The State: Socialism's Old CaretakerMarxism Today, Vol. 28, No. 11 (November 1984)15. Blue Election, Election BluesMarxism Today, Vol. 38, No. 7 (July 1987)16. The Meaning of New Times New Times, L&W (1989)15. And Not A Shot Fired: The End of Thatcherism?Marxism Today, Vol. 42, No. 12 (December 1991)17 Our Mongrel Selves New Statesman (1992)18. The Great Moving Nowhere Show Marxism Today, special issue (November-December 1998)19. New Labour's Double-ShuffleSoundings, No. 24 (Summer 2003)20. The Neoliberal Revolution Soundings, No. 48 (Summer 2011)
Stuart Hall taught at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies at Birmingham University from 1964 to 1979, and was Professor of Sociology at the Open University from 1979. He was a founding editor of Soundings and wrote widely on politics and culture, including pioneering work on Thatcherism, race, empire and representation.
'Hall's capacity to remind us that it was no less possible to think
Britain without its empire than it was the colonies without the
metropolitan "motherland" was a product of the changing
conjunctures in which he lived his life. It was the quickening pace
of decolonization, together with the escalation of the commonplace
racism and racial violence against people of color in Britain in
the mid-1960s, that pushed the legacies of colonialism to the
forefront of Hall's work. The last colonial could only slowly
decolonize his own thought.'
'That the British left has yet to decolonize--to fully understand
the entanglement of capitalism and colonialism or the intersections
of class and race they have created--was painfully evident from its
struggle to make sense of the resurgence of white nationalism
unleashed by Brexit. It is, as Hall wrote of the left at the height
of Thatcherism, a hard road to renewal. Let's hope it is not also a
long one.' James Vernon, Public Books
'By gathering together these pieces in one place this volume shows
just how eager and unremitting Hall was in tackling the changing
political dynamics of the time. Unafraid and unreserved in his
analysis, the writing is full-on in it's speaking of truth to
power. The style varies over time, but the sparkle and urgency
remain throughout. As well as being described as a cultural
theorist, Hall is often seen to be a public intellectual. Here we
see these characteristics mixing together in a volatile but
controlled cocktail. The potency of the voice and its immersion in
political debates and dialogue is striking -- it is perhaps so
striking because it is so unusual in its tenor and almost unique in
its power. In this regard this collection is a call to engage as
well as a guide in how to question our pressing political concerns.
It demands involvement. It demands thoughtful and considered
interaction -- without the need to pacify our critical edges.
Hall's edge was certainly never dulled, not by time or by what
might have appeared to be a potentially futile and harsh political
landscape.' David Beer, Medium
'Davison, Featherstone, Rustin and Schwarz have done a magnificent
job of capturing his ideas in this nearly fifty year evolution.
Hall was drawn intuitively to Freudianism (with much of the British
New Left) and deconstruction, precisely because the old truisms of
the British class struggle--the working class triumph over a
collapsing capitalism--had run dry. [...] Hall captured the status
of the underclass effectively as he posed the political and social
reality of the 1980s.' Paul Buhle, Labour and Working Class History
Association (LAWCHA)
The centerpiece essay is "The Great Moving Right Show," his 1979
analysis of Margaret Thatcher's "authoritarian populism." Her rise
was as much a cultural turning point as a political one, in Hall's
view--an enmity toward the struggling masses, obscured by her
platform's projected attitude of tough, Victorian moderation. Many
of the pieces in this collection orbit the topic of "common sense,"
how culture and politics together reinforce an idea of what is
acceptable at any given time.' Hua Hsu, the New Yorker
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