GEOFF BOTTOMS relishes a profoundly human portrait of a family as it evolves across 55 years in Sheffield
Socialism: A Very Short Iintroduction
By Michael Newman
Oxford University Press, £8.99
Oxford University Press’s Very Short Introduction series provides exactly that: brief but comprehensive coverage of the topic under consideration. These guides provide excellent resources for students – and indeed for anyone who wants to gain a critical overview of the area in question.
Michael Newman’s Socialism: A Very Short Introduction offers precisely this type of initiation to the study of socialism - this fully updated and revised version explaining the history of socialist ideas and their relevance for today and tomorrow.
The coverage is comprehensive despite the book’s deceptively small size. Having defined socialism, the discussion moves on to outline the main current of socialist thought, from the utopian socialists, including Henri de Saint-Simon, Robert Owen and Charles Fourier through to anarchist traditions and on to Marx and Engels and subsequent debates within Marxism.
The selection, analysis and interpretation of historical ‘facts’ always takes place within a paradigm, a model of how the world works. That’s why history is always a battleground, declares the Marx Memorial Library
From hunting rare pamphlets at book sales to online panels and courses on trade unionism and class politics, the MML continues connecting archive treasures with the movements fighting for a better world, writes director MEIRIAN JUMP
MARJORIE MAYO welcomes challenging insights and thought-provoking criticisms of a number of widely accepted assumptions on the left
These are vivid accounts of people’s experiences of far-right violence along with documentation of popular resistance, says MARJORIE MAYO



