Kevin B. Anderson, The Late Marx’s Revolutionary Roads: Colonialism, Gender, and Indigenous Communism – Verso, March 2025

Kevin B. Anderson, The Late Marx’s Revolutionary Roads: Colonialism, Gender, and Indigenous Communism Verso, March 2025

The author of the acclaimed Marx at the Margins analyses the late Marx on Indigenous communism, gender, and anti-colonialism.

In his late writings, Marx went beyond the boundaries of capital and class in the Western European and North American contexts. Kevin Anderson carries out a systematic analysis of Marx’s Ethnological Notebooks and related texts on Russia, India, Ireland, Algeria, Latin America, and ancient Rome. These texts, some of them only now being published, provide evidence for a change of perspective, away from Eurocentric worldviews or unilinear theories of development. As Anderson shows, the late Marx elaborated a truly global, multilinear theory of modern society and its revolutionary possibilities.

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Jenny Edkins, Maja Zehfuss and Thomas Gregory (eds.), Global Politics: A New Introduction 4th Edition – Routledge, 2025

Jenny Edkins, Maja Zehfuss and Thomas Gregory (eds.), Global Politics: A New Introduction 4th Edition – Routledge, 2025

Global Politics: A New Introduction engages directly with questions that those coming to the study of world politics bring with them. From that innovative starting point, it explores key issues through a critical and inquiring perspective, presenting theoretical ideas and concepts in conjunction with a global range of historical and contemporary case studies.

Revised and updated throughout, the fourth edition offers examples engaging with the latest developments in global politics: the climate crisis and anthropocentrism, Indigenous experiences and thinking, racism and the rise of xenophobia, artificial intelligence, citizen journalism, global health and pandemic response and drone warfare.

Global Politics:

• examines most significant issues in global politics – poverty, development, colonialism, human rights, gender, inequality, race, war, peacebuilding, security, violence, nationalism, authority and what we can do to change the world;

• offers chapters written to a common structure ideal for teaching and learning and features a key question, an illustrative example, general responses and broader issues;

• integrates theory and practice throughout the text, drawing on international relations, political theory, postcolonial studies, sociology, geography, peace studies and development.

This exciting, up-to-date and ground-breaking textbook is essential reading for all those concerned about global politics.

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Melayna Kay Lamb, A Philosophical History of Police Power – Bloomsbury, February 2024, paperback September 2025

Melayna Kay Lamb, A Philosophical History of Police Power – Bloomsbury, February 2024, paperback September 2025

Rethinking the philosophical grounds of police power, Melayna Lamb argues that traditional ideas of sovereignty and the law need to be radically re-evaluated. In placing police at the centre of analysis this book demonstrates the manner in which police power exists in a complex and overlapping relationship with sovereignty and law in a form which is not reducible to implementation. In doing this it argues for the centrality of order in any consideration of police and challenging a common narrative whereby a dynamic, interventionist sovereign power that follows from a belief of order as ‘artificial’ is replaced by a liberal, limited non-interventionist sovereign power that proceeds from a ‘natural’ order. Moving through thinkers such as Hobbes, Hegel and Adam Smith the book argues that police power is in fact an-archic in form, in a manner that makes it impossible to hold accountable through the law.

Lamb adopts an interdisciplinary approach that turns to philosophy to make sense of global events that see police power at their centre. This includes the history of police brutality in the US, the structural injustices made more apparent by COVID-19 and the growing calls to abolish the police.

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Paula Diehl and Michael Saward, Bodies, Spaces, Claims: The Theory and Practice of Performing Political Representation – Oxford University Press, February 2025

Paula Diehl and Michael Saward, Bodies, Spaces, Claims: The Theory and Practice of Performing Political Representation – Oxford University Press, February 2025

There is no political representation without performance. When politicians, protesters, and even celebrities appear in public, they make or constitute political representation by performing it, shaping how we view roles and institutions and imagine society. Building theory through rich case studies—from the festival stage to the toppling of statues, and from presidential inaugurations to parliaments and council chambers – the book deepens our understanding of political representation by exploring how embodied action in different spaces creates representative claims in our highly mediatized contemporary politics. It shows how a performative take on representation is critical to our understanding of: the symbolism of political authority; the limits of democratic leadership; the politics of material spaces and presences; political empowerment and disempowerment; and the claim to and denial of authenticity in political life.

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Michael Braddick, Christopher Hill: The life of a Radical Historian – Verso, February 2025

Michael Braddick, Christopher Hill: The life of a Radical Historian – Verso, February 2025

Update December 2025: New Books discussion with Lucas Tse

A luminous biography of one of the 20th century’s most influential historians

Christopher Hill was one of the leading historians of his generation. His work across more than 15 books and dozens of articles fundamentally rewrote the way we understand the English Revolution and the development of the modern British state. While his career brought many of the trappings of establishment respectability – he was both a Fellow of the British Academy and the Master of Balliol College, Oxford – he was also seen as a threat to that very same establishment. Under surveillance by the security services for decades, in the 1980s Hill was publicly accused of having been a Soviet agent during the war. His was a Cold War life, as well as a scholarly one.

In this brilliant work of biography, Michael Braddick charts Hill’s development from his abandonment of the respectable provincial Methodism of his youth, through his embrace of Marxism, his membership and eventual break with the Communist Party, as well as his celebrated intellectual career. While many of his books – not least the thrilling work of historical resurrection, The World Turned Upside Down, and God’s Englishman, his classic biography of Oliver Cromwell – are still widely read and admired, his intellectual reputation was damaged by sustained academic criticism in the politically-charged atmosphere of the 1980s.

Braddick’s judicious biography not only situates Hill’s life and work in their historical context but seeks to rescue Hill for a new generation of readers.

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Marie-Louise Sjoestedt (1900-1940): an important scholar of Celtic languages and mythology

One of the challenges with my current project on Indo-European thought in France is how male-dominated it is. If you look at a photograph of the professors of the Collège de France in 1967, you can perhaps see why. It wasn’t much better at the Collège de France almost 20 years later (1985).

In fields related to those I’m studying for this project, it’s interesting that the first female professor of the Collège de France was Jacqueline de Romilly (1913-2010), elected to a chair with the title Greece and the Formation of Moral and Political Thought [La Grèce et la formation de la pensée morale et politique] in 1973. I think that the second was Françoise Héritier (1933-2017), who was elected a whole decade later. She succeeded Claude Lévi-Strauss, with a chair in the Comparative Study of African Societies [Étude comparée des sociétés africaines] in 1983. So far, neither of them has featured in the work I’m doing, though both have connections to those people whose careers I am exploring.

Of course, the Collège de France is an elite institution, and there are all kinds of complicated politics in terms of who gets elected. But even looking at other major institutions shows a clear gender imbalance. There are many interesting figures who connect to the story I’m trying to tell, but relatively few women and it can be difficult to find out much information about them.

Of an earlier generation, Marie-Louise Sjoestedt is particularly intriguing. She was born on 20 September 1900. Her father was a Swedish diplomat based in France and her mother was a novelist from Corsica. Her older sister was the artist Yvonne Sjoestedt. She was part of the impressive generation of students taught by Antoine Meillet in the 1920s, alongside Pierre Chantraine, Jerzy Kuryłowicz, Louis Renou, Emile Benveniste and – slightly more distantly – Georges Dumézil. Her husband Michel Jonval, also a linguist with a specialisation in Baltic languages, died young in 1935, just three years after they married. Meillet said this generation was remarkable in that it was clear that many of them would soon be masters themselves.

Photograph taken in Meillet’s office, 5 April 1928. Left to right: Émile Benveniste, René Fohalle, Jerzy Kuryłowicz, Antoine Meillet, Louis Renou, Pierre Chantraine, Marie-Louise Sjoestedt.
The original is in Benveniste’s archives at the Collège de France; and it is reproduced on the cover of Didier Samain and Pierre-Yves Testenoire (eds.), La Linguistique et ses forms historiques d’organisation et de production: Actes du colloque de la Société d’histoire et d’épistémologie des sciences du langage et du laboratoire Histoire des théories linguistiques Paris, 24-26 janvier 2019, Paris: SHESL, 2022.

Sjoestedt died at the age of just 40 by suicide, not long after the French defeat and the arrest of her second husband by the Germans. In a brief biography Renou says that there had been several previous attempts (p. 11). Dumézil acknowledges her death in the second edition of his Mitra-Varuna in a somewhat guarded way: “she was not to survive France’s first misfortunes” (p. xxxvii). 

Sjoestedt was the author of several technical works on the Welsh and Irish languages, including L’aspect verbal et les formations à affixe nasale en celtique, which appeared when she was just 25. It was her primary doctoral thesis, defended in June 1926. Renou says that Meillet was the rapporteur for this thesis; Joseph Vendryes for the secondary thesis on a Middle Irish Saga, ‘The siege of Druim Damhghaire’ (p. 6). Natalie Zemon Davis says Vendryes directed the first thesis, which seems likely. Vendryes worked on Latin and Celtic, and taught alongside Meillet at the École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE). In time, Sjoestedt, Benveniste, Dumézil, Chantraine and other Meillet students would teach at the EPHE too. Sjoestedt taught there between 1926 and 1928, in a temporary post, and then Greek at the University of Rennes in Brittany, before a post in Celtic languages was created for her at the EPHE in 1929 (Renou pp. 7-8; see Pierre-Yves Lambert’s entry in the Dictionary of Irish Biography).

Sjoestedt spent a lot of time in Ireland and Wales, and produced a two-volume study of Irish dialects – Phonétique d’un parler irlandais de Kerry (1931) and Description d’un parler irlandais de Kerry (1938) – building on then innovative research on phonology. She also worked on Celtic mythology, especially the legend of Cuchulainn, and her Dieux et héros des Celtes (1940) was intended for a much wider audience. It was translated by her former student Myles Dillon as Gods and Heroes of the Celts after her death

Sjoestedt was one of the editors of Études celtiques, alongside Vendryes. She attended some of Dumézil’s classes on mythology in the 1930s, but he recalls that he was also her student, as she taught him Welsh and Irish. Dumézil said that his aim was to gain the ability to read myths in those languages, not to be able to speak the modern versions. He did, however, later spend some time in Bangor in North Wales. Dumézil references Sjoestedt’s work in Mitra-Varuna, dedicates Jupiter, Mars, Quirinus to her memory, and as noted above, in the preface to the second edition mentions her as one of his students and colleagues lost in the war.

Natalie Zemon Davis, in a valuable essay on “Women and the World of the Annales” situates Sjoestedt in relation to a wider intellectual network. Much of her discussion covers the story outlined above, but is based on a reading of sources in the Annuaire of the EPHE as well:

Joining [Germaine] Rouillard at the Ecole Pratique in 1926 and under like auspices was a young woman whose family was of Swedish origin, Marie-Louise Sjoestedt. She had published her doctoral thesis that year, a technical linguistic study directed by the great Celtic specialist at the Sorbonne, Joseph Vendryes. Vendryes had just taken over the Celtic program at the Ecole Pratique and brought Sjoestedt along as Chargie de conferences to teach both middle and modern Irish. She continued to work as his associate over the years: in 1936, when the Etudes Celtiques were founded (published by Eugénie Droz), Vendryes was the editor and Sjoestedt was the Secretaire de la Rédaction, while writing reviews and articles for the journal. But, a Directeur d’études from 1930 on, she also developed on her own, marrying a fellow linguist who worked on Baltic languages and Latvian myth, discussing linguistic matters with her colleague at the Ecole, Emile Benveniste, and returning often to Ireland for field work in language and folklore. In 1938, she reviewed a new History of Ireland for the Annales. Her important book on the structure of Celtic myths about gods and heroes was under press as the Germans invaded France. She committed suicide in early December 1940 at age forty; her Dieux et héros des Celtes appeared a few weeks later. 

Reviewing the book in the first Annales to appear under the Occupation, [Lucien] Febvre praised Sjoestedt’s ‘remarkable knowledge of the languages, beliefs and customs of the Celtic world’ and regretted that she was gone when so much was still to be expected from her labour.

Natalie Zemon Davis, “Women and the World of the Annales”, History Workshop Journal, 1992, 126-27, see 134-35, n. 34.

A collection of tributes – including ones by Benveniste and Dumézil and a brief biography by Louis Renou – was published in 1941: Marie-Louise Sjoestedt (1900–1940). In Memoriam. Vendryes’s obituary was published in Études Celtiques in 1948. As far as I’m aware, there is no archive of her papers available.

References

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt (1900–1940). In Memoriam, suivi de Essai sur une littérature nationale, la littérature irlandaise contemporaine, Paris: E. Droz, 1941. 

Georges Dumézil, Mitra-Varuna: An Essay on Two Indo-European Representations of Sovereignty, trans. Derek Coltman, ed. Stuart Elden, Chicago: Hau, 2024.

Lucien Febvre, “Histoire des Religions: une nouvelle collection”, Annales d’histoire sociale 3, 1941, 98-99.

Pierre-Yves Lambert, “Sjoestedt (-Jonval), Marie-Louise”, Dictionary of Irish Biographyhttps://www.dib.ie/biography/sjoestedt-jonval-marie-louise-a8102

Seán Ó Lúing, “Marie-Louise Sjoestedt, Celtic Scholar (1900-1940)”, Journal of the Kerry Archaeological and Historical Society 20 (1987), 79-93.

Louis Renou, “Notice biographique”, in Marie-Louise Sjoestedt (1900–1940). In Memoriam, 3-11.

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt, L’Aspect verbal et les formations à affixe nasal en celtique, Paris: Librarie Ancienne Honoré Champion, 1926.

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt, Phonétique d’un parler irlandais de Kerry, Paris: Ernest Leroux, 1931.

Marie-Louise Sjœstedt-Jonval, “Légendes épiques Irlandaises et monnaies gauloises: recherches sur la constitution de la légende de Cuchulainn”, Études Celtiques I, 1936, 1-77.

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt, Description d’un parler irlandais de Kerry, Paris: Honoré Champion, 1938.

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt, Dieux et héros des Celtes, Paris: PUF, 1940; Celtic Gods and Heroes trans. Myles Dillon, New York: Dover, 2000 [1949].

Joseph Vendryes, “Nécrologie: Marie-Louise Sjoestedt”, Études Celtiques 4 (2), 1948, 428-33.

Natalie Zemon Davis, “Women and the World of the Annales“, History Workshop Journal 33, 1992, 121-37.

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This is a revised and expanded version of a post from May 2023. It is the fourth post of an occasional series, where I try to post short essays with some indications of further reading and sources, but which are not as formal as something I’d try to publish more conventionally. They are usually tangential to my main writing focus, a home for spare ideas, asides, dead-ends and possible futures. I hope there is some interest in them. They are provisional and suggestions are welcome. The other posts so far are:

Benveniste, Dumézil, Lejeune and the decipherment of Linear B – 5 January 2025

Foucault’s 1972 visit to Cornell University – 12 January 2025 (updated 14 January)

Benveniste and the Linguistic Circle of Prague – 19 January 2025

Thomas Sebeok, Umberto Eco and the Semiotics of Nuclear Waste – 2 February 2025

Vladimir Nabokov, Roman Jakobson, Marc Szeftel and The Song of Igor – 9 February 2025

Ernst Kantorowicz and the California Loyalty Oath – 16 February 2025

The full list of ‘Sunday histories’ is here.

Posted in Antoine Meillet, Emile Benveniste, Georges Dumézil, Sunday Histories | 15 Comments

Christopher Burke and Adam Tamas Tuboly, Otto Neurath in Britain – Cambridge University Press, January 2025

Christopher Burke and Adam Tamas Tuboly, Otto Neurath in Britain – Cambridge University Press, January 2025

Otto Neurath (1882–1945) was an Austrian-born philosopher of science, sociologist and political economist, and one of the most multi-faceted and creative thinkers in the Vienna Circle. Forced into exile by fascism, he was part of the intellectual exodus from Central Europe. After an adventurous escape to England and internment as an ‘enemy alien’, he enthusiastically adapted to British culture, working on documentary films and publications for the war effort using the Isotype method of visualization. He treasured the British habit of ‘muddling through’, and debated planning and economics with fellow Central European émigrés, Friedrich Hayek, Karl Mannheim and Karl Popper. Based on new archival research, this book explores a little-known period of Neurath’s rich and fascinating life, weaving together biographical, historical, and philosophical strands that reflect the cross-cultural currents of twentieth-century intellectual history through the lens of Neurath’s contribution.

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Tom Arnold-Forster, Walter Lippmann: An Intellectual Biography – Princeton University Press, June 2025

Tom Arnold-Forster, Walter Lippmann: An Intellectual Biography – Princeton University Press, June 2025

Walter Lippmann (1889–1974) was among the most influential and wide-ranging political writers in modern America. As both a journalist and political theorist, he shaped ideas about liberalism and democracy, the nature of public opinion, US power and empire, and the roles of journalists, experts, and citizens. Tom Arnold-Forster provides a bold historical reassessment of Lippmann’s intellectual life, offering fresh perspectives on a career at the intersection of daily news and democratic theory.

This incisive book shows how Lippmann helped define the public debates of American liberalism from the Progressive Era to the Cold War. By exploring his ideas in their historical context, Arnold-Forster challenges the claim that Lippmann was primarily a theorist of expertise and technocracy. Instead, Lippmann emerges as a strikingly political thinker, public-facing and multifarious, who focused on what politics meant and how it worked in modern democracies. Covering subjects from press freedom to urban reform to economic and foreign policy, while tracing the evolution from his early liberal socialism to later conservative liberalism, this book explores Lippmann’s thought as reflecting the protean character of liberal politics and the crises and paradoxes of democracy.

Walter Lippmann: An Intellectual Biography is a richly historical account of a complex political thinker. Lippmann’s ideas played a formative role in the twentieth century and resonate powerfully with our fraught present.

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Jakob Norberg, Schopenhauer’s Politics – Cambridge University Press, January 2025 (print and open access)

Jakob Norberg, Schopenhauer’s Politics – Cambridge University Press, January 2025

Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) lived through an era of great political turmoil, but previous assessments of his political thought have portrayed him as a pessimistic observer with no constructive solutions to offer. By assembling and contextualizing Schopenhauer’s dispersed comments on political matters, this book reveals that he developed a distinct conception of politics. In opposition to rising ideological movements such as nationalism or socialism, Schopenhauer denied that politics can ever bring about universal emancipation or fraternal unity. Instead, he viewed politics as a tool for mitigating rather than resolving the conflicts of a fundamentally imperfect world. Jakob Norberg’s fascinating book reconstructs Schopenhauer’s political ideas and shows how they relate to the dominant debates and trends during the period in which he lived. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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Celebrating 100 years of Gilles Deleuze – Edinburgh University Press

Celebrating 100 years of Gilles Deleuze – Edinburgh University Press

In the centenary year of his birth, we celebrate the impact of Gilles Deleuze, one of the greats of twentieth-century philosophy. 

We kick off on the birthday itself – the 18th of January – with a blog post from Ian Buchanan, editor of both the journal Deleuze and Guattari Studies and the book series Deleuze Connections and Plateaus – New Directions in Deleuze Studies. Look out for more Deleuze-related posts throughout this anniversary year!

Each month we’ll also be making an issue from the Deleuze and Guattari Studies journal free to read! This month, discover Deleuze and Marx

Circle back to find new blogs and free issues each month and scroll down to find out more about our exciting publishing in the field.

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