Old Gods, New Enigmas is Davis's book-length engagement with Karl Marx, marking the 200th anniversary of Marx's birth and exploring Davis's thinking on history, labor, capitalism, and revolution - themes ever present the early work from this leading radical thinker. This will be his first book on Marxism itself.
In a time of ubiquitous disgust with political and economic elites, explores the question of revolutionary agency--what social forces and conditions do we need to transform the current order?--and the situation of the world's working classes from the US to Europe to China. Even the most preliminary tasks are daunting. A new theory of revolution needs to return to the big issues in classical socialist thought, such as clarifying "proletarian agency", before turning to the urgent questions of our time: global warming, the social and economic gutting of the rustbelt, and the city's demographic eclipse of the countryside. What does revolution look like after the end of history?
"In this collection of essays, Davis searches Karl Marx's oeuvre for a revolutionary paradigm capable of addressing present-day economic inequality and climate change ... While the esoteric case studies and historical summaries will appeal primarily to readers already familiar with Marx, the book also offers the simple pleasure of watching Davis's nimble mind at work."
--New Yorker
"An exact and exacting account of the forces and tendencies that compose the present, written in the grand tradition of Marx, Lenin and Trotsky, not as the application of a theory but as a guide to action. It is the indispensable starting point for any strategy that seeks to end the catastrophe of capitalism's continued existence."
--Warren Montag, author of Bodies, Masses, Power
"There is no one better at building on Marx's legacy of profound and engaged political analysis--the Marx of the Manifesto and The 18th Brumaire--than Mike Davis. This new book puts the class formation, deformation and reformation of precarious proletariats, the social meanings and staying powers of national identities, the capitalist nature of ecological crises in brilliantly well-informed historical, comparative and revolutionary perspective."
--Leo Panitch, Professor Emeritus, York University
"Whether his theme is Marxian views of proletarian agency or of nationalism, Kropotkin's climatological-historical materialism or the prospects for an ecosocialist reinvention of city life, Mike Davis's guiding vision is clear and bold: a reinvigorated and politically charged Marxism, brimming with original insights and suffused with historical depth."
--Nancy Fraser, author of Fortunes of Feminism
"Davis resuscitates myriad overlooked works of political and environmental history and theory in this insightful collection."
--Publishers Weekly
"The heterogeneity of Davis's latest book reflects his decades of accumulated interests ... [Davis is] a formidable intellectual, and this collection contains many gems."
--Troy Vettese, Boston Review
"An excellent, pocket-ready primer for historicized militant organizing."
--Carl Grey Martin, Socialism and Democracy
"Davis offers the possibility of hope ... His clear writing style ... successfully combining a select history of labour movements, a careful rereading of Marx, and a frank consideration of the calamitous ecological consequences of capitalism on climate change, so as to present a vision of how coming forms of capitalism can best be opposed and transformed into socialist movements that can sustain life instead of destroying it."
--Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
"Brimming with insights, Old Gods, New Enigmas is a collection in which [Davis] attempts to make sense of how, in the face of crisis and potential disaster, workers can realize their latent power to build a world that respects the implacable demands of ecology and averts climate apocalypse."
--Micah Uetricht, The Nation