I want to buy and send books to my friends to radicalize them. I already sent one to a friend when I was kind of shocked he tried to recommend me Factfulness by Hans Rosling (he is part of the "rational optimists" like Steven Pinker who basically think the neoliberal status quo is effective in solving world problems). As a reaction I send him The Divide by Jason Hickel and read Factfulness out of respect for his opinion and understanding how these writers argue for the status quo (it is a terrible book).

The issue with some of my friends is is that they start to have kneejerk reactions when too much Marxist jargon is being used. I don't blame them because society teaches that. Are there books you would recommend for them to read which is accessible? For me it is most important they understand the global economic dynamics and how imperialism works and how capitalism is incompatible with democracy.

I was thinking about a Noam Chomsky book or Howard Zinn as starters. Are there any others?

  • Neckbeard_Prime [they/them,he/him]
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    edit-2
    3 years ago

    The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck. It's not entirely fiction; he basically stitched the narrative together based field notes of migrant farmers' personal stories from the Depression.

    From wiki:

    Steinbeck was known to have borrowed from field notes taken during 1938 by Farm Security Administration worker and author Sanora Babb. While Babb collected personal stories about the lives of the displaced migrants for a novel she was developing, her supervisor, Tom Collins, shared her reports with Steinbeck, who at the time was working for the San Francisco News.[9] Babb's own novel, Whose Names Are Unknown, was eclipsed in 1939 by the success of The Grapes of Wrath and was shelved until it was finally published in 2004, a year before Babb's death.

    The Grapes of Wrath developed from The Harvest Gypsies, a series of seven articles that ran in the San Francisco News, from October 5 to 12, 1936. The newspaper commissioned that work on migrant workers from the Midwest in California's agriculture industry. (It was later compiled and published separately.[10][11])

    In mid-January 1939, three months before the publication of ''The Grapes of Wrath'', Steinbeck wrote a long letter to his editor at Viking Press, Pascal Covici. He wanted Covici, in particular, to understand this book, to appreciate what he was up to. And so he concluded with a statement that might serve as preface in and of itself: "Throughout I've tried to make the reader participate in the actuality, what he takes from it will be scaled on his own depth and shallowness. There are five layers in this book, a reader will find as many as he can and he won't find more than he has in himself."[12]

    Edit: I mistakenly said that Steinbeck was a TVA worker and witnessed this stuff himself; I didn't realize he got the notes from Babb.