Kevin B. Anderson is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of numerous books, including Lenin, Hegel, and Western Marxism: A Critical Study (second ed., 2022), Marx at the Margins (2016), Foucault and the Iranian Revolution (with J. Afary, 2005), and the forthcoming The Late Marx's Revolutionary Roads.
Kevin B. Anderson’s book is a masterwork of socio-political theorizing, which analyzes developments in Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, Syria, Sudan, South Africa, and France. His insights are guided by a profound grasp of Marx, Lenin, Dunayevskaya and other leading contributors to socio-political thought. He rejects the campist ideological frameworks fostered by Stalinism that are still in operation today, including those partisans of the left who strongly support Palestine but not Ukraine, and those liberals who reverse this, supporting Ukraine but not Palestine. He gives attention to both regime repression and the dialectics of counter-revolution within the revolution in Syria. Written in a clear-headed prose with flashes of coruscating insight, Anderson’s book provides the groundwork for a renewed hope to all those who are attempting to gain a clear vision of what options and opportunities exist for creating a socialist/humanist alternative. Peter McLaren, emeritus professor, UCLA and author of Che Guevara, Paulo Freire, and the Pedagogy of Revolution For decades, Kevin B. Anderson has been a first-rate scholar of the sociology of revolution and his study is extremely timely, as I know of no other such book advocating revolutionary hope in a period dominated by more pessimistic analyses of assaults on democracy and the rise of various movements of authoritarian populism and fascism. Prof. Anderson is an expert on the Arab world, Europe, and Russia from the perspective of a sociology of globalization and revolution and is well-qualified to undertake this important and highly relevant topic. Douglas Kellner, George Kneller Chair, UCLA and author of Media Culture: Cultural Studies, Identity, and Politics in the Contemporary Moment (2nd ed., Routledge, 2020) This lively book may be summarised as: how a Marxist humanist confronts the disintegrating post-war order. Kevin B. Anderson’s writing is, throughout, informed by the consistent methodology of Marxist humanism, of which he is globally authoritative exponent. The book directly challenges a worldview increasingly common, that “class” is not a valid framework for understanding the events of revolt, revolution, and resistance. The synthesis of events even now unfolding ensure a relevance and timeliness, and the broad humanist vision at the core will provide a long shelf-life to this work. Paul Mason, journalist, filmmaker, activist, and author of How to Stop Fascism (2021) and Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our Future (2015)