Bhaskar Sunkara

Bhaskar Sunkara (born June 20, 1989) is an American political writer. He is the founding editor and publisher of Jacobin and publisher of Catalyst: A Journal of Theory and Strategy[1] and London's Tribune.[2] He is a former vice-chair of the Democratic Socialists of America and the author of The Socialist Manifesto: The Case for Radical Politics in an Era of Extreme Inequality as well as a columnist for The Guardian US.[3]

Bhaskar Sunkara
Born (1989-06-20) June 20, 1989
Alma materGeorge Washington University
Occupation
  • Publisher
  • writer
  • editor
Years active2010–present
TitleFounder and publisher of Jacobin

Early life

Sunkara was born in the United States to parents of Indian ancestry who had migrated to the US from Trinidad a year before he was born.[1] Sunkara credited his politicization to his reading as a teenager: from George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm he developed an interest in Leon Trotsky, reading his autobiography and Isaac Deutscher's three-volume biography, before progressing to the New Left, including thinkers such as Lucio Magri, Ralph Miliband, Perry Anderson and the journal New Left Review. He joined the Democratic Socialists of America at the age of 17, becoming editor of the DSA youth section's blog The Activist.[4] He went on to study history at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., where he conceived the idea of Jacobin: after his sophomore year, he missed two semesters due to illness, and spent the time reading Marxist works.

Career

By the summer of 2010, he was preparing to return to his studies and inspired to create the magazine, which launched online in September of that year and in print at the beginning of 2011.[1]

Sunkara described Jacobin as a radical publication, "largely the product of a younger generation not quite as tied to the Cold War paradigms that sustained the old leftist intellectual milieus like Dissent or New Politics".[5]

The New York Times interviewed Sunkara in January 2013, commenting on Jacobin's unexpected success and engagement with mainstream liberalism.[6] In late 2014, he was interviewed by New Left Review on the political orientation and future trajectory of the publication[1] and in March 2016 was featured in a lengthy Vox profile.[3]

Sunkara writes for Vice magazine, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Nation, among other outlets.[6] He has appeared on the PBS Tavis Smiley program, MSNBC's Up with Chris Hayes, and the FX show Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell.

gollark: See, this works brilliantly.
gollark: What *is* `linked_chats.json`? I don't get this. What is it storing?
gollark: It's 1.2MB and writes it synchronously to my server's slow HDD.
gollark: I suspect the issue might be `linked_chats.json`.
gollark: There's no reason it should be this slow.

References

  1. Anderson, Perry (November–December 2014). "New masses, new media: Bhaskar Sunkara "Project Jacobin" interview". New Left Review. New Left Review. II (90).CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  2. Waterson, Jim (August 31, 2018). "US journalist to revive Labour left magazine Tribune". theguardian.com. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  3. Matthews, Dylan (March 21, 2016). "Inside Jacobin: how a socialist magazine is winning the left's war of ideas". Vox. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  4. "Lessons From the First Red Century". jacobinmag.com. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
  5. "No Short-Cuts: Interview with the Jacobin". Idiom magazine. March 16, 2011.
  6. Schuessler, Jennifer (January 1, 2013). "A Young Publisher Takes Marx into the Mainstream". The New York Times.
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