'Overall, the book offers a combination of original empirical chapters exploring contemporary issues of political transformation, exploitation and resistance and wonderful theoretical chapters, highlighting the contribution of key Latin American thinkers to the furtherance of Marxist debates. [ The] book will work well as an introduction for those looking to discover the historical and contemporary relevance of Marxism for the region as well as providing standalone chapters that offer rich contributions to individual thinkers or areas of concern.'(Chris Hesketh, Progress in Political Economy, October 21, 2019)'These "nine interpretative essays" on Latin American Marxisms are ensconced in the spirit of José Carlos Mariįtegui, weaving a red thread through struggles over capital accumulation, uneven development, commodity production, dispossession, state forms, and emancipation to assist in breaking with both the shackles of empire and Eurocentrism'(Professor Adam David Morton, University of Sydney; Co-author of Global Capitalism, Global War, Global Crisis (Cambridge University Press, 2018))'Latin American Marxisms is an apt title for a volume that testifies to the fact that, when confronted with a materialist imperative, Marxism can only take the road of plurality. The careful architecture of the book takes the reader from a re-thinking of long-standing categories in Marxist thought to an open dialogue with the social and cultural developments that have shaped the history of modern Latin America. This collection covers an impressive array of subjects from dependency theory and the political economy of telecommunications to the legacies of José Carlos Marķategui and the often conflicted relationship between indigenous inspired policies and Marxism in the Andes. It is to the editors' and contributors' credit that this variety does not result in dispersion but, in line with the epistemological call issued by Fredric Jameson many years ago, in the elaboration of a continental mapping. So, while the book appeals to a variety of readers, it is also an invitation to break disciplinary borders and to engage with the multiplicity of conditions that determine the object Latin America as a totality. Latin American Marxisms is not a meditation on the nature of Marxist thought or its adequacy to a Latin American context (although it tackles these subjects), but rather a decisive effort to illuminate some obscure areas of Latin America with the notions accrued by Marxist thought over almost two hundred years of collective history. The book will appeal to those interested in the most recalcitrant materiality (as in infrastructural projects and questions of material development) and to those focused on cultural memory or on the mutations that the formidable clash of neo-liberal pressures and endogenous social movements have wrought on the notions of state, people and civil society.'(Dr Horacio Legrįs, University of California; Author of Literature and Subjection (2008) and Culture and Revolution. Violence Memory and the Making of Modern Mexico (2016))'The text, based on analyses that range from theoretical abstraction, through the concrete forms adopted by policies that have been identified with socialism, to the links between Marxism and culture, outlines the contributions of Latin American Marxism to global critical theory. It follows that, despite emerging from a regionalist vision, the heterodox reflections that revolutionary intellectuals have developed in our continent have fostered re-discoveries and re-appropriations that, precisely because Marxist theory seeks to place itself in reality, cannot be, paraphrasing Mariįtegui, a copy of a doctrine, but must vary with respect to the situation and historical context in which they are situated. However, and this is what seems to me to be central to the book, the contributions to strengthen the heterodox reflections of Marxism that make it a tool to think and practice emancipation, must resituate the thought generated by the intellectuals of world peripheries, given that in them, there is creative material as well as emancipatory movements to re-position the relevance and depth of Marxism(s). Por śltimo, podemos mencionar que el texto, a partir de anįlisis que van desde la abstracción teórica, pasando por las formas concretas que adoptan polķticas de Estados que se han identificado con el socialismo, hasta los vķnculos entre marxismo y cultura, van contorneando las contribuciones del marxismo latinoamericano a la teorķa crķtica global. De ahķ se desprende que, a pesar de surgir desde una visión regionalista, las reflexiones heterodoxas que han desarrollado intelectuales revolucionarios en nuestro continente, han permitido propiciar re-descubrimientos y re-apropiaciones que, en tanto la teorķa marxista busca situarse en la realidad, no pueden ser, parafraseando a Mariįtegui, una copia de un cįnon que debe variar respecto de la situación y contexto histórico desde el cual se situe. Sin embargo, y esto es lo que me parece central del libro, los aportes para robustecer las reflexiones heterodoxas del marxismo que permitan hacer de este una herramienta para pensar y prįcticar la emancipación, deben pasar por resituar las reflexiones generadas por los intelectuales de las periferias del mundo, dado que en ellos, se encuentra material creativo a la vez que movimientos emancipatorios que dan sustento para re-situar la relevancia y profundidad del (los) marxismo(s)."(Tomįs Torres López Alberto Hurtado University, Chile; Quarterly Review of Academia de Humanismo Cristiano, Vol. 28: Spring, 2019)