When radical left wing Labour Party leader Harry Perkins becomes prime minister, it looks as though Britain really is on the path to socialism through parliament.
Ken Loach has long been Britain’s leading socialist filmmaker. His work stretches from early films such as Cathy Come Home in the mid-1960s, to Route Irish, which came out earlier this year.
Truth and Reconciliation concentrates a powerful emotional experience into just over an hour.
John Molyneux sets out to give a rational and intelligent response to the growing popularity of anarchism, as both movement and ideology.
This show by anti-war sculptor May Ayres, a regular in Left in Vision at the Marxism festival, is truly outstanding.
The Oscar-winning filmmaker, satirist and international rabble-rousing writer (Stupid White Men, Fahrenheit 9/11, Bowling For Columbine) makes a rare live tour to celebrate his new book, Here Comes Trouble: Stories From My Life.
Pearl Jam were a central part of the Seattle grunge scene in the 1990s. They also raged against George Bush, anti-abortionists and the corporate stranglehold over the US.
In the early 1980s, the black US punk band Bad Brains would get their audience to chant, "Black and white, we come here to unite."
Lecturer Will Kaufman’s new book, Woody Guthrie: American Radical, uncovers fascinating new angles on the Depression-era musician. But Will has a novel approach to publicising his work.
The past year has seen the world alter dramatically. These changes are chronicled, often beautifully, in The Press Photographer’s Year exhibition.
Journalist Mishal Husain uses mobile phone footage and social media postings to chart the uprisings of the Arab Spring.