Book Review: Sherry Wolf, *Sexuality and Socialism: History, Politics, and Theory of LGBT Liberation*

Book Review: Sherry Wolf, *Sexuality and Socialism: History, Politics, and Theory of LGBT Liberation*
Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2009. YOU ARE SEVENTEEN, you enjoy sex with members of your gender, and you have a growing interest in radical politics. What should you believe, what should you do? The socialist position seems practically indistinguishable from mainstream liberalism: support for same-sex marriage, hate crime laws, and a trans-inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA). There seems to be a more radical option, however. Against the (allegedly) reformist, assimilationist, and legalistic orientation of actually existing gay politics, self-described “queers” demand a politics of radical sexual difference; a politics that seeks, somehow, to go beyond equality. [Read More]

Book Review: Terry Eagleton, _Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate_

Book Review: Terry Eagleton, _Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate_
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009 STUDY THE STALLS OF A SEMINARY BATHROOM and chances are you will find the following scrawled out in ballpoint: “Nietzsche: God is Dead. God: Nietzsche is dead.” The quip relies on a misreading – God, for Nietzsche, did not die like your grandmother or pet turtle might die. God died like a language might die. In a secular world, belief becomes unbelievable. But the bathroom graffiti retains a bit of truth. [Read More]

Book Review: David Renton, *Dissident Marxism: Past Voices for Present Times*

Book Review: David Renton, *Dissident Marxism: Past Voices for Present Times*
London: Zed Books, 2004. IN 1926, HISTORIAN CARTER WOODSON inaugurated “Negro History Week.” Negro History Week bred Black History Month, and Black History Month bred the many diverse “Heritage” months of our American calendar: Women’s History Month, Asian Pacific Heritage Month, Hispanic Heritage Month, and American Indian Heritage Month, to pick just a few. But along the way, the justification for studying history changed. Woodson believed the study of black history could erode racism and cultivate the recognition of human equality. [Read More]