Critique

The first woman of the British revolution

Education theory as a weapon of liberation

Untangling the lies

Teaching and the struggle for justice

Challenging the status quo

GATS and the dangers for libraries

Lifting the lid on the state within the state

McLibel: The sequel - the postman and the gardener who took on McDonald's

Letter from Ukraine

Global coalition launch campaign against international surveillance

A dynamic guide to the future

A licence to print money

Passengers to face trial in France for preventing a violent deportation

Public sector pension action grows

One market under God

Dublin - rebel city

The awkward truth

Into a world of hate

For New Labour its 'just law'

GB84 - a powerful tribute to the miners' strike

Chavez and the struggle for power in Venezuela

The making of a cybertariat

Globalisation, the state and revolution

The quest for an Islamic Enlightenment

Stalin: the horror behind the image

Stupid White Men

No theory, no Lenin

Klein opens the window on globalisation

Can we have our Old Labour back, please!

The US could use nuclear weapon in Iraq

Just do it - don't think about it

Black Earth City

Foxhunting and land ownership - the rich at play

A woman of the revolution

Out from the shadow of a martyr

Life beyond the logo

How the US spied on refugees from Hitler

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Challenging the status quo

Review by Alpesh Maisuria

Not only does this book have a fearsome cover, the message it disseminates is equally chilling. Peter McLaren has authored this book at a time when it seems that the disease of capitalism is spreading and it is legitimised by the ideological apparatus of neo-liberalism. McLaren not only unpacks the language of the status quo, and explains the complexities of its matrix, but he tears apart its propaganda.

The book is a collection of essays all authored by McLaren in collaboration with distinctive authors including Valerie Scatamburlo-D'Annibale, Paula Allman and Glenn Rikowski, Donna Houston, Gregory Martin, and Nathalie E. Jaramillo.

The essays are written eloquently and in a manner that is accessible to academics and students alike. The reasoned arguments are substantiated with wonderful examples of the subterfuge and the plain evil of the Bush II administration vis-à-vis its war on justice, liberty and emancipation. The book's greatest asset is the way that it untangles the web of lies and untruths manifested and perpetuated through education systems, the media, religion, IMF, WTO, World Bank and other globalised structures.

As well as producing a formidable argument against neo-liberalism and capitalism, McLaren brilliantly examines the relationship between class, gender, race and ecology with capital. The book not only deals conclusively with the criticism aimed at Marxism, and the limitations of postmodernism theory, but also persuasively offers dissent through critical pedagogy and revolutionary pedagogy.

The overarching argument in all the essays is that the time is ripe for a sustained and concerted effort, especially in schools, to resist and challenge the status quo. The reader will conclude that the alternative is a socialist future underpinned by peace and justice - but this needs action, and now.

It is absolutely delightful to see a heavyweight of McLaren's calibre come out with all guns blazing alongside his collaborators. This is a hard-hitting book that clarifies the state of the world, and what we could do about it. McLaren, for more than two decades, has consistently produced works of immense quality. This has to be among the best.

Capitalist & Conquerors. A Critical Pedagogy Against Empire
Rowman & Littlefield 2005
ISBN: 0742541924