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      • LeftWord Books

        LeftWord Books is a New Delhi-based publishing house that seeks to reflect the views of the left in India and South Asia. We publish critical and analytical works on a range of subjects, and pay special attention to works on Marxist theory. We project the interests of the working people and movements for social transformation. Set up in 1999, LeftWord runs and manages May Day Bookstore, which is next door to a theatre space, Studio Safdar. LeftWord Books is the publishing division of Naya Rasta Publishers Pvt Ltd.

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      • Left Bank Literary

        Left Bank Literary is a Sydney-based literary agency specialising in quality fiction and non-fiction.    Our name references the creative environment that blossomed in 'the city of light' nearly a century ago. These writers were a vital force in an era of rising conservatism and facism. We have created Left Bank Literary to provide a home for the fertile ideas of our clients and to ensure literature continues to contribute to the most important conversations of the world.

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      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        October 2019

        The black book of communism in Brazil

        by Gustavo Marques

        Inspired by 'The Black Book of Communism', published by Stéphane Courtois in France in 1997, this book written by the diplomat Gustavo Henrique Marques Bezerra, deals with the history of the communist movement and its influence on political and cultural life Brazilian since the advent anarchism and Marxism, in the late nineteenth century until the early 1990s, with the collapse of the communist regimes of Eastern Europe. The book, which has monumental characteristics - it is the result of over 10 years of intense historical extensive and thorough research on more than 400 titles from primary sources (interviews, memoirs, interviews, documents) and secondary, domestic and foreign. It is divided into six chapters with almost 900 pages and thousands of notes - places emphasis on generally omitted facts and / or little explored by Brazilian historiography, mostly on the left, revealing the "dark side" of the Communists and their allies in Brazil over the twentieth century.

      • February 2017

        NAXALITE POLITICS

        POST-STRUCTURALIST, POSTCOLONIAL AND SUBALTERN PERSPECTIVES

        by Pradip Basu

        Indeed, the upheaval was such that nothing remained the same after Naxalbari. People had to readjust their position vis-à-vis every aspect of the system: political, administrative, military, cultural” (Samar Sen). Hence, it is no wonder that various schools of thought gave rise to new understandings of the movement and the social system. This book is a pioneer inter-disciplinary work which probes into the Naxalite movement from the new post-structuralist, postcolonialist and subaltern perspectives. In the research papers incorporated in this book, Naxalite politics has been studied using several new theoretical tools- Lacanian psychoanalysis, Foucauldian bio- power, discourse, genealogy and archaeology, Derridean deconstruction, spectrality, postcolonial anamnesis, politics of taxonomy, sexual subalternity, luminal space, representation, subaltern praxis and others.

      • Biography & True Stories
        December 2015

        Son of Paul Gauguin

        The Life and Times of Emile Gauguin

        by David McIntyre and Francis Butterworth

        Son of Paul Gauguin: the life and times of Emile Gauguin is a biography of the insignificant son (his words) of a great and famed painter. A mechanical engineer by trade as far away from the art world as you can get to a world of measurement and construction. Yet Paul Gauguin’s first son’s life from birth to death was never boring Although one may think an engineering career would be staid and carefully ordered, it was nothing of the kind. It started out well-planned being groomed to be an aristocrat, a student in the art of war, finishing as a professional engineer. But then, the plan changed with exciting highs and horrendous lows at every turn. Sprinkled with newly found Gauguin trivia we see a child some might feel neglected by his family, cursed to have an internationally renowned father, grow and mature to a handsome, confident young man yet be rejected and ostracized at almost regular intervals: in Denmark and Colombia and America. Yet still he remained a proud, engineer-adventurer-warrior leading rebel fighters cheating death in the northern Andes, constantly searching for work on three continents, continually facing financial collapse, fighting off hunger as a homeless transient in the American Great Depression. At the same time his marriage was on the rocks, filled with blistering hatred which after a number of long periods of separation and dizzying attempts at reconciliation ended abruptly each time in near total relationship destruction eventually resulting in complete abandonment of five generations including his mother, brothers, wife, children and grandchildren. Then, suddenly, at life’s darkest hour when he wrote his Colombian cousin, summarizing page-after-page his pathetic existence, almost as a miracle his life two thirds over changed one year later to one of happiness and peace.

      • September 2013

        The Kip Brothers

        by Jules Verne, translated by Stanford L. Luce, Arthur B. Evans

        Jules Verne’s extraordinary crime drama—now in English

      • History of art & design styles: from c 1900 -
        January 2017

        Hungarian Art

        Confrontation and Revival in the Modern Movement

        by Éva Forgács

        “I was unable to put down [this book]; one that will be used by those interested in the field for a long time to come.”– Dr. Oliver Botar, Hungarian Cultural Studies   Insightful essays, monographic texts, and rarely-seen images trace from birth to maturation several generations of Hungarian Modernism, from the avant-garde to neo-avant-garde. Éva Forgács corrects long-standing misconceptions about Hungarian art while examining the work and social milieu of dozens of important Hungarian artists. The book also paints a fascinating image of twentieth-century Budapest as a microcosm of the social and political turmoil raging across Europe up to and beyond the collapse of the Soviet Era.

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