My uncle asked me for a primer on socialism. I was thinking maybe Socialism Made Easy or Socialism: Utopian and Scientific. Anything that might be better?
For context my whole family are through and through vote blue liberals. It’s sad to say but most of them didn’t even like/vote for Bernie during the primary cycles. They aren’t really hardcore anticommunists though and have always been good on unions and labor generally, moreso the problem is really anti-Trump/pro-Dem brainworms. Maybe there’s something more modern to share that I don’t know of.
My suggestions for a good well rounded primer, imo:
Intro to theory:
- The Principles of Communism by Engels
- Why Socialism? by Mr. Einstein himself
- Understanding Socialism by Richard Wolff
- Understanding Marxism by Richard Wolff(personally haven’t read this yet)
- The Communist Manifesto
For historical analysis:
- Blackshirts and Reds by Michael Parenti
- A People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn
For understanding media biases against socialism:
- Inventing Reality by Parenti
- Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky(haven’t read yet so subject to change)
For philosophy:
- Elementary Principles of Philosophy by Georges Politzer(since Marx was first a philosopher, this is super helpful in understanding where he got his ideas of what socialism in the modern era can look like - I’m currently reading this)
For later if he wants more:
- The State and Revolution by VI Lenin
- Reform or Revolution by Rosa Luxemburg
I would maybe wait on state and revolution. I was listening to an audiobook and without context it sounds like an unwrapped twitter beef full of people with weird names you’ve never heard before.
Yeah. And no “vote blue no matter who” lib is going to accept a critique of universal suffrage right off the bat.
I didn’t even know this was in State and Rev, is it near the end? Is the critique regarding ex owners and all that?
It’s not socialism, but Listen, Liberal: Or whatever happened to the party of the People? By Thomas Frank might help get the Dem brain worms out of their head.
Freedom is a Constant Struggle - Angela Davis
In Defense of Looting - Vicky Osterweil
World Systems Analysis: An Introduction - Immanuel Wallerstein
I don’t think anyone here needs to read Terry Eagleton, but as a first step at pulling a lib left, Why Marx Was Right is something I’ve had some success starting people off with. You’ll have more work to do afterward, since it’s weak on the post-Lenin Soviet Union, so I’d supplement it with (at the very least) Red Sails’s “Tankies”.
On socialism as a realistic, achievable system with a modern perspective I have to recommend Towards a New Socialism. Caveat being that Paul Cockshott is a TERF POS.
For an introductory text to get started just tell him to check out the Communist Manifesto, easy to understand and light on the jargon.
I’ve read TANS and thought it was really nice and digestible too. I’ve been in the process of working through How the World Works for a couple years now as well, it’s great for when I have the time to focus on something a little more academic. Too bad Cockshott is such a reactionary shithead.