PAUL DONOVAN is chilled by the contemporary resonance of Harper Lee’s coming of age tale amidst racism and white supremacy in this excellent production
Glasgow has a rich and vibrant history of working-class revolt and although this book styles itself as “skeletal,” it’s a more than worthwhile contribution if only for the passion that the author brings to his subject.
Beginning in the late 18th century, Couzin’s story of “the city of compassion and wisdom” runs through to the present day, with major industrial strikes covered in reasonable detail. The UCS work- in of 1971-72 is fairly well known, yet others like the 1787 weavers’ strike are less so and Couzin does a valuable job in rescuing them and community-based struggles such as the great rent strikes from historical obscurity.
And he details the mass opposition to war and conscription that serve as a timely rebuke to revisionist accounts of anti-war movements.
HENRY BELL follows the lineage of revolutions, from the English to the Chinese, and asks where revolutionary politics exists today
JULIA TOPPIN recommends Patti Smith’s eloquent memoir that wrestles with the beauty and sorrow of a lifetime
BRENT CUTLER is intrigued by the imperialist, supremacist and contradictory history of a word that is used all too easily
HENRY BELL notes the curious confluence of belief, rebuilding and cheap materials that gave rise to an extraordinary number of modernist churches in post-war Scotland


