The Magna Carta Manifesto: Liberties and Commons for All
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| The Magna Carta Manifesto: Liberties and Commons for All | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This remarkable book shines a fierce light on the current state of liberty and shows how longstanding restraints against tyranny--and the rights of habeas corpus, trial by jury, and due process of law, and the prohibition of torture--are being abridged. In providing a sweeping history of Magna Carta, the source of these protections since 1215, this powerful book demonstrates how these ancient rights are repeatedly laid aside when the greed of privatization, the lust for power, and the ambition of empire seize a state. Peter Linebaugh draws on primary sources to construct a wholly original history of the Great Charter and its scarcely-known companion, the Charter of the Forest, which was created at the same time to protect the subsistence rights of the poor.
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| 04-29-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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I picked up Peter Linebaugh's Magna Carta Manifesto expecting an historical tour of the Magna Carta's influence on Western political-legal development over the intervening centuries. There was enough of that, but one mostly gets instead a non-fiction acid trip through forest culture and the meadows of Runneymeade, New York City on a good day.
Linbaugh's argument is true brilliance, if less-than-perfectly coherent: that despite the universal rhetorical reverence in which the Magna Carta is held, Western governments have never truly embraced the spirit of that great document, and continue to defy its most important articles through the eradication of customary economic rights (as embodied in the English "common") and prolonged (if interrupted) history of usurpations against the liberties of those out-of-favor. His proof is obvious, so Linebaugh respects the reader by withholding much of it, devoting himself primarily to context instead. It's a tour of the arts and humanities, with hard truths carved into monuments, captured on canvas, exposed and encrypted through poetry, poetry, and poetry. The tone is socialistic, the flavor is utopian, as though truth really does set one free. Here is a book about justice; let it enhance your mind. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-16 06:16:14 EST)
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| 04-05-08 | 4 | 1\1 |
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This is a wonderful book that makes immense sense read alongside Karl Polanyi's "the Great Transformation", the masterpiece of political economy written in the 1940's.
I find Linebaugh's approach to these issues, viewing the use of law "social contracts" and constitutions through a lense rooted squarely in history and political-economy both instructive and fascinating. I myself had never given much time to pondering the "Magna Carta" idea or considering its implications for a liberating political-economy but this book explores these issues exceptionally well. A former instructor of mine at Bosphorus University, Dr. Huricihan slamolu,actually more-or-less pioneered the field of "political economy of law" but this work is very much in the same vein and is an outstanding contribution to the analysis and solution of one of the key issues we face today; the struggle to preserve and extend the "commons" against the all-consuming transformation being wrought on society by unrestrained (or rather, "barely restrained")private power. I thoroughly recommend this book for anyone interested in social justice and the struggle for a more humane world. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-29 06:05:13 EST)
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| 03-28-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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The issue of "LIberties and Commons" is very much up in the world right now. This is a dry, but well done
history of the Magna Carta. The passage from Olde England to private property England, and across the ocean to the pre-revolutionary USA. And now, world-wide, we are back to the issue of Commons and Private Property. Very relevant. Who are the contemporary Robin Hoods? The Kings? The Sherriffs? And who wants to join up with the Merry Band? (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-06 18:40:35 EST)
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| 02-25-08 | 3 | 1\12 |
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Linebaugh (yes, its not "Limbaugh") does some good, and some other stuff as well. His basic, and welcome contribution is to emphasize the seldom noticed "Charter of the Forests," the little brother of the Magna Carta, which deserves more attention.
Linebaug's disservice is seeing everything through "commoning" lenses, i.e., communist theory. If you, like me, don't read much Marxist revisionism, you will have a weary time plowing through all the references to "imminent" communists (largely unknown to me), who seem to have more ways of cooking the same communal stuff than Italian chefs have for preparing pasta. And the distraction is regretable because it obscures an important point: since the time of William the Conquerer the way we have contolled and organized the economic use of land has been one of the central formative factors in the development of Western Civilization - if Western Civilization matters to progressive intellectuals any more. Linebaugh sees nothing but goodness in "commoning" but I wondered how he would react if I "commoned" his car or his house or his library. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-29 06:10:37 EST)
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