The Subversive Seventies, Michael Hardt
The Subversive Seventies, Michael Hardt
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The Subversive Seventies

Author: Michael Hardt

Narrator: Tom Parks

Unabridged: 10 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 10/31/2023


Synopsis

In The Subversive Seventies, Michael Hardt sets out to show that popular understandings of the political movements of the seventies—often seen as fractious, violent, and largely unsuccessful—are not just inaccurate, but foreclose valuable lessons for the political struggles of today. While many accounts of the 1970s have been written about the regimes of domination that emerged throughout the decade, Hardt approaches the subversive from the perspectives of those who sought to undermine the base of established authority and transform the fundamental structures of society. In so doing, he provides a novel account of the theoretical and practical projects of liberation that still speak to us today, too many of which have been all but forgotten.

The movements of the seventies responded directly to emerging neoliberal frameworks and other structures of power that continue to rule over us today. They identified and confronted political problems that remain central for us. The 1970s, in this sense, marks the beginning of our time. Looking at a wide range of movements around the globe, from the United States, to Guinea Bissau, South Korea, Chile, Turkey, and Italy, The Subversive Seventies provides a reassessment of the political action of the 1970s that sheds new light not only on our revolutionary past but also on what liberation can be and do today.

About Michael Hardt

Michael Hardt teaches political theory in the Literature Program at Duke University. He is coauthor, with Antonio Negri, of the Empire trilogy and Assembly. He is codirector with Sandro Mezzadra of The Social Movements Lab.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tim on January 03, 2024

Michael Hardt has written a very good book, filled with stories of resistance and attempts at creating new modes of life. It powerfully challenges the line that the seventies were merely a moment of regression into violent armed struggle. Across the world there were vibrant attempts at liberation. Ev......more

Goodreads review by Isobel on April 03, 2025

interesting reflection on a variety of different 70s movements, pulling out commonalities between their strategies even while maintaining their contexts. some sections were more dry than others, but I particularly enjoyed the discussions of multiplicity and theatres of injustice......more