Forking Paths

February 20, 2025

Greetings Ideas Letter readers.

We are delighted this issue to feature essays by two esteemed Argentine journalists, Mario Santucho and Jordana Timerman, which explore memory, revolution, and Argentina’s turn towards the reactionary. Santucho, whose revolutionary parents were killed and disappeared in the 1970s, tries to make sense of his own history as refracted through the current political conjuncture. Timerman critically considers her own activist history via Peronism, an all-encompassing worldview (some say cosmology) that defines the fault lines of Argentina’s past and present. Jorge Luis Borges hovers over both pieces, Santucho’s explicitly. 

Musa al-Gharbi, whose new book Gary Younge critically appraised in our last issue, offers a defense of his sociological analysis, especially how one thinks about the so-called woke.

We then have a few other responses stemming from Nicholas Bequelin’s formidable essay published in Issue 32 on the state of the human rights movement. Bequelin himself responds to LuHan Gabel and then Aryeh Neier responds to all.

Our curated content kicks off with an essay about the DRC and what many miss in this complicated country because of analytical blinders. With the horrors unfolding in eastern DRC today, enhanced analytical chops are indeed crucial. 

We follow with the Guerrilla Podcast’s spirited discussion of how South Africans apprehend their role and commitments as a BRICs founder. Narnia Bohler-Muller, a South African law professor, walks us through how South Africa understands its country’s positioning globally and at home. 

Next up is a tour d’horizon of Jamaica, specifically the Jamaica under the once heroic leadership of Michael Manley.  Commemorating his centenary, Phenomenal World has an interview with Anthony Bogues of Brown University who knew Manley well. 

Last, the brilliant philosopher Gillian Rose, who tragically left us far too young in 1995, is having a renaissance with the republication of a few of her classic works. In this Jacobin essay by Robert Lucas Scott, Rose’s work is assayed with an eye towards its relevance for today’s battered global left. 

Our musical selection for Ideas Letter 34 is, naturally, an Argentine. Before he sold out (cashed in?), Gato Barbieri was an exceptional, adventurous tenor player who powerfully integrated free jazz with Latin and Brazilian influences.  Here is “Zelao” from Barbieri’s 1970 record, The Third World.

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations