Andrew Chuter reviews graphic novel, Stuck Rubber Baby, a powerful story of one person's growth to enlightenment within a turbulent period of social upheaval.
Andrew Chuter reviews graphic novel, Stuck Rubber Baby, a powerful story of one person's growth to enlightenment within a turbulent period of social upheaval.
If you missed the event, you can now catch Green Left's March 27 birthday celebration on video.
Barry Healy reviews a new book researching the impact and consequences of anti-Semitism during the Russian Revolution.
Here's a look back at March's political news and the best new music that related to it.
Climate and Capitalism editor Ian Angus introduces six new books that are worth reading — and one that isn’t.
Jazz is quintessentially American music. But, as Barry Healy writes, the story of jazz is a harrowing tale of racism and criminal violence stretching through to the present day.
Even before it was released and became a New York Times bestseller, Gayle Tzemach Lemmon’s book The Daughters of Kobani made headlines, writes Marcel Cartier.
In the early 1970s, the National Front was on the rise in Britain. So a ramshackle group of DIY leftists organised Rock Against Racism and took on the fascists. White Riot is a celebration of their struggle and victory, writes Barry Healy.
Chris Nelius, the director of Girls Can’t Surf, spoke with Green Left about the making of the film.
Mat Ward takes a look back at February's political news and the best new music that related to it.
The magnificence of the Black Panther Party and its martyed leader, Fred Hampton, are brought to life in Judas and the Black Messiah, a film with a few defects, writes Barry Healy.
Isabelle Huppert comes to rule the Parisian hashish trade in this comedy/drama that demonstrates the casual violence of the French police, writes Barry Healy.