Wars of Position? <i>Marxism Today</i>, Cultural Politics and the Remaking of the Left Press, 1979-90
معرفی کتاب «Wars of Position? <i>Marxism Today</i>, Cultural Politics and the Remaking of the Left Press, 1979-90» نوشتهٔ H. F. Pimlott، منتشرشده توسط نشر Brill Academic Pub در سال 2021. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Wars of Position analyses the UK left’s most public periodical under Thatcherism: Marxism Today. It connects the periodical’s political-ideological and cultural transformation via its relationship with the Communist Party, production, distribution, publicity, media relations, cultural coverage, design, and writing style. Contents Preface Acknowledgements Tables and Illustrations Tables Illustrations Abbreviations Introduction. The Left, Cultural Form and Political Practice 1. Sign(ifier) of the Times? 2. The Production of the ‘Marketplace of the Ideas’ 3. Overview of the Book Chapter 1. Marxism Today’s Story: An Historical Narrative of a Cultural Form 1. The Left, Cultural Form and Political Practice 2. The Party and the Party Paper: Leninist Communication Practices 3. Leninist Communication Practices: The Party as a Medium of Communication 4. The CPGB’s Practice of ‘Democratic Centralism’ 5. Leninist Communication Practices: Agitation and Propaganda 6. Leninist Communication Practices: The Party Paper 7. A Basic Typology of Communist Party Publications 8. The Beginnings of Postwar Reconstruction and Periodical Developments 9. Precursors: The Commission on Party Journals 1953 10. Precursors: Marxist Quarterly (1954–57) 11. Precursors: The Commission on Inner Party Democracy 1957 12. Marxism Today: ‘The First Generation’: 1957–77 13. A Party of Two Wings 14. The Brief Rise of ‘Eurocommunism’ 15. Marxism Today’s Transformation: ‘Caution & Compromise’, 1977–83 16. ‘Reaction & Realignment’ 1983–87 17. ‘The Tail Wags the Dog’: 1987–89 18. ‘New Times’, 1989–91 19. Conclusion Chapter 2. From ‘New Left’ to ‘New Labour’: Marxism Today’s ‘Political Project’ and the ‘Retreat from Class’ 1. ‘Forward March of Labour Halted?’ 2. ‘Thatcherism’ 3. Thatcherism: Critiques 4. Separation of ‘The Economic’ 5. Alternate Political Explanations 6. Elections, Polling and Public Opinion 7. ‘Common Sense’ 8. Thatcherism’s Theoretical Underpinnings: The ‘Wrong’ Gramsci? 9. ‘Ideology’ vs. ‘Discourse’ 10. ‘Hegemony’ 11. Social Production of Ideologies 12. The Hegemonic Apparatus 13. ‘New Times’: From New Left to New Labour? 14. Part II: ‘From Wars of Position to Cultural Politics’ 15. ‘Popular Politics’ 16. Feminism and the New Social Movements 17. ‘Municipal Socialism’ 18. The Communist Party, Popular Culture and Marxism Today 19. From ‘Rock Against Racism’ to ‘Designer Socialism’ 20. Conclusion Chapter 3. ‘The Party Line versus the Bottom Line’? The Political Economy of Radical Magazine Production 1. ‘Passive’ and ‘Active’ Editorships, 1957–91 2. ‘Editorial Control’ or ‘Cultural Circle’? 3. ‘Who Pays the Piper, Calls the Tune?’ Financing Marxism Today 4. Advertising 5. ‘Private Enterprise or Political Commitment?’ Printing and Subscriptions 6. ‘A Little Help From My Friends’: The Process of Magazine Production 7. The Production Process 8. Conclusion Chapter 4. ‘From the Party Line to the Politics of Design’: Marxism Today’s Cultural Transformation 1. The Theory of the Periodical and Magazine Design in the 1980s 2. Format: ‘From a Journal into a Magazine’ 3. The First Format: 1957–79 4. The Second Format: 1979–86 5. The Third Format: 1986–91 6. Front covers 7. Visual Communication, Advertising and Design 8. Editorial Sections: Features 9. Features: Alternative Modes of Presentation 10. Modes of/for Discussion 11. Other Editorial Sections 12. Cultural Coverage: From ‘Reviews’ to ‘Channel Five’ 13. The Politics of Form and the Form of Politics 14. Conclusion Chapter 5. ‘From the Margins into the Mainstream’: Publicity, Promotion and Distribution in the Marketplace of Ideas 1. Party Distribution 2. ‘Out-of-Party’ Distribution 3. In the Marketplace of Left Periodicals 4. ‘Cadres to Consumers’: Changes in Readership, 1957–91 5. Contributors 6. Book Publishing 7. ‘The Art of Talking’: Discussion Groups, Talks, Events, Conferences 8. Promotion 9. Publicity 10. National Press Coverage 11. ‘Thinking the Unthinkable’ 12. Conclusion Chapter 6. ‘Write Out of the Margins’: Communist Ideology and Accessibility, Rhetoric and Writing Style 1. Twentieth-Century Communist Rhetoric 2. Accessibility 3. Marxism Today’s Defensive Rhetorical Strategy 1957–77 4. ‘Solidification’ 5. Principles of Good Style 6. Language 7. Plain Style 8. Marxism Today’s Top Two Contributors: Eric Hobsbawm and Stuart Hall 9. Eric Hobsbawm and the Rhetorical Style of ‘Realistic Marxism’ 10. Rhetorical Strategy and Writing Style 11. Stuart Hall: Socialist Public Intellectual and Polemical Rhetorician 12. Stuart Hall’s Rhetorical Techniques and Writing Style 13. Qualification and Conditionality 14. Unity and Division on the Left: From ‘Common Sense’ to Caricature? 15. Tropes and Metaphors 16. Stuart Hall’s ‘Realism’ 17. Conclusion Chapter 7. ‘W(h)ither the Party Paper’? What Lessons for the Left Press? 1. A Perennial Question 2. Epilogue Illustrations: Marxism Today 1957–1991 References Primary Materials Interviews and Personal Communication Periodical Articles (Not from MT’s Clippings File) Newspaper and Periodical Articles (MT’s Clippings File) All Materials Drawn from Martin Jacques’s Private Papers, Unless Otherwise Noted, and the Communist Party of Great Britain Archives at the People’s History Museum MA Theses and PhD Dissertations Secondary and Scholarly Bibliography Index Inspired by Raymond Williams? cultural materialism, H.F. Pimlott explores the connections between political practice and cultural form through 'Marxism Today'?s transformation from a Communist Party theoretical journal into a ?glossy? left magazine. 'Marxism Today'?s successes and failures during the 1980s are analysed through its political and cultural critiques of Thatcherism and the left, especially by Stuart Hall and Eric Hobsbawm, innovative publicity and marketplace distribution, relationships with the national UK press, cultural coverage, design and format, and writing style. 'Wars of Position?' offers insights for contemporary media activists and challenges the neglect of the left press by media scholars Inspired by Raymond Williams's cultural materialism, H.F. Pimlott explores the connections between political practice and cultural form through Marxism Today's transformation from a Communist Party theoretical journal into a 'glossy' left magazine. Marxism Today's successes and failures during the 1980s are analysed through its political and cultural critiques of Thatcherism and the left, especially by Stuart Hall and Eric Hobsbawm, innovative publicity and marketplace distribution, relationships with the national UK press, cultural coverage, design and format, and writing style. Wars of Position offers insights for contemporary media activists and challenges the neglect of the left press by media scholars
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