Paths of Revolution: Selected Essays
By (Author) Adolfo Gilly
Edited by Tony Wood
Translated by Lorna Scott Fox
Verso Books
Verso Books
10th January 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Revolutionary groups and movements
980.039
Paperback
288
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 18mm
322g
The Argentine-born writer Adolfo Gilly has directly observed many of Latin Americas most dramatic events, from the Bolivian Revolution of the 1950s and Cuba during the Missile Crisis to the guerrilla wars of Central America and Mexicos Zapatista uprising. Paths of Revolution presents the first representative selection from across his extensive body of work, collecting close-quarters reportage, sharp political analyses and reflections on art and letters. A living link between the New Left of the 1960s and the Pink Tide of recent decades, Gilly once described the twentieth century as a series of lightning flashes which can illuminate our present-day predicament. The essay form is where he fully comes into his own, covering a truly impressive range of topics and places. This collection draws out the continuities within one of the worlds more vibrant and politically successful left traditions. In the Introduction, Tony Wood (author of Russia Without Putin) offer an overall portrait of Gillys life and work.
A long-awaited assemblage of the writings of one of Latin America's most important revolutionary intellectuals. -- Greg Grandin, author of The End of the Myth
Captures the long arc of Gilly's political commitments and his rare combination of revolutionary principle and strategic agility. -- Jeffery R. Webber, co-author of The Impasse of the Latin American Left
Gilly is a gifted journalist, deep thinker, and brilliant writer-activist. This rich selection begins to fill a lacuna in the Anglophone world. -- Suzi Weissman, biographer of Victor Serge
A revolutionary militant whose commitments took him all the way across Latin America and to Europe, into clandestinity, exile and the Mexican jail where his classic study La revolucin interrumpida was conceived and written. * New Left Review *
Adolfo Gilly shows that intelligent criticism requires passion . . . and that the vision of struggle between heroes and villains belongs to a rudimentary and scholastic version of the events. -- Carlos Monsivis, writer and cultural critic
Adolfo Gilly was born in Buenos Aires in 1928. A Trotskyist since his youth, immersed in the workers movement, he worked in Bolivia for the Fourth International and Marcha, a leading Latin American political and cultural weekly. In Italy in 1960-62 he witnessed the beginnings of the autonomia movement. He reported from Cuba for Monthly Review and travelled with leftist guerrillas in Guatemala. In 1966 he was arrested in Mexico and spent six years in Lecumberri Prison, where he produced La revolucin interrumpida (in English, The Mexican Revolution). On his release he was deported to France, returning in 1976 when he secured a teaching job at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. He has lived in Mexico ever since.