Summer 2022 issue of Salvage, featuring Richard Seymour, Stuart Hall, Sita Balani, and Sophie Lewis
A Ceaseless Storm includes an essay on Stuart Hall by Richard Seymour, and an essay by Stuart Hall on Marxism, Sita Balani on the nuclear family, Anne Rumberger on the evangelical anti-abortion movement, Robert Knox on conservatives selectively venerating institutions, Jamie Allinson on counter-revolution, Nadia Bou Ali on Lebanon, Brendan O’Connor on abolition and the state, Oliver Eagleton on Keir Starmer, and Sophie Lewis on abortion and bodily autonomy.
With poetry by Mira Mattar and fiction by Anka Dabrowska.
A Ceaseless Storm includes an essay on Stuart Hall by Richard Seymour, and an essay by Stuart Hall on Marxism, Sita Balani on the nuclear family, Anne Rumberger on the evangelical anti-abortion movement, Robert Knox on conservatives selectively venerating institutions, Jamie Allinson on counter-revolution, Nadia Bou Ali on Lebanon, Brendan O’Connor on abolition and the state, Oliver Eagleton on Keir Starmer, and Sophie Lewis on abortion and bodily autonomy.
With poetry by Mira Mattar and fiction by Anka Dabrowska.
About Salvage
Salvage is a bi-annual journal of revolutionary arts and letters.
Salvage recognises that the catastrophe is already upon us and that the decisive struggle is over what to do with the remains.
Salvage is for a communism of the ruins.
Salvage is committed to publishing the best radical essays, poems, art and fiction without sectarian, stylistic or formal constraint. Salvage requires only that they cleave to liberation.
Salvage was founded by Jamie Allinson, Charlotte Bence, Magpie Corvid, China Miéville, Richard Seymour and Rosie Warren.
Salvage is funded entirely by subscriptions.