Skip to product information
1 of 1

Intersectional Socialism

Regular price $40.95
Regular price $40.95 Sale price $40.95
Sold out
In the context of sustained economic and environmental crises, marked by extreme inequalities of wealth, rising xenophobia, racism and precarity, never has the need for a radical change of system b...
Read More
  • 11 February 2025
View Product Details

In the context of sustained economic and environmental crises, marked by extreme inequalities of wealth, rising xenophobia, racism and precarity, never has the need for a radical change of system been so pressing.

This book is an invitation to think the world otherwise. The author breathes new life into socialist thought through the deployment of an intersectional lens, bringing diverse struggles for emancipation both within and outside the Global North into dialogue with one another.

In doing so, he offers the kind of bold and holistic thinking the present situation calls for.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $40.95
Pages: 218
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Publication Date: 11 February 2025
ISBN: 9781529212594
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Social Theory, Social theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity
REVIEWS Icon
“Both utopian and pragmatic, this book offers a bold, inclusive invitation. Foregrounding women-of-colours' and decolonial theories, Masquelier reframes socialism in a broader, radically interconnected framework. I highly recommend this book.” AnaLouise Keating, Texas Woman’s University
Charles Masquelier is Associate Professor in Sociology at the University of Exeter.

1. Introduction

2. Intersectionality, Pluriversality, and Libertarian Socialism

3. Pluriversal Intersectionality and Capitalist Domination

4. Pluriversal Emancipation

5. Work, Property, and Resource Allocation

6. On the ‘Production of Life’ and Labour of Care

7. Beyond the Modern Liberal-Capitalist State

8. Conclusion