How To Be a Revolutionary
How To Be a Revolutionary
Ratings2
Average rating4
A sympathetic, unwaring untangling of leftist guilt during parallel revolutions. Jumping between contemporary Shanghai, pre-to-post communist China, and 1980s Cape Town, How to Be a Revolutionary is less concerned with historical specificity than the mutual grief and shame felt by those unable to save the people around them from state violence. It is both a condemnation of inaction and a challenging attempt to interrogate our complicity in ongoing atrocities.
Structurally, it's an ambitious bit of time traveling (if occasionally difficult to keep mentally organized). The second act's pacing slows considerably but in service of expanding on characters whose motivations near the end would otherwise read as reckless (if not outright cruel). There is still a pronounced amount of shock value in the final revelations which I am torn on, though the historical context makes it feel a bit more justified.
Recommend for fellow comrads struggling with apathy and guilt at how little any one person can do.