Universal Struggle
Socialism is not Eurocentric because the logic of capital is universal and so is resistance against it. Cultural specificities may shape some details of capitals operation differently in the United States and in Bangladesh, in France and in Nicaragua, but they do not alter its fundamental prioritization of profits over people.
A Universal Struggle
Socialism is not Eurocentric because the logic of capital is universal and so is resistance against it.
by Nivedita Majumdar 4/5/16
Socialism is in the air. It returned to the United States with the 2008 economic crisis, which made capitalisms exploitative nature clear for a new generation, and unleashed struggles to challenge austerity and staggering income inequality. Activists in a host of movements helped create the environment in which a presidential candidate could talk about socialism on a national stage.
Though he might not be the most radical of figures, Bernie Sanders, who openly identifies as a socialist, is drawing tens of thousands to his campaign, upending everyones expectations.
Its no surprise, then, that the idea of socialism also faces heavy counterattack and not only from the Right. Within the Left itself, there is suspicion of an ideal many view as single-mindedly focused on economic issues and distant from other everyday sufferings, especially those of black and brown people.
Sanderss specific evocation of Scandinavian social democracy has elicited criticisms that he endorses a kind of Nordic exceptionalism that is hostile to diversity. Such attacks on even the tamest varieties of socialism are nourished, especially on college campuses, by theoretical positions that see Marxism and many of its descendants as hopelessly Eurocentric ...
Much more here:
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/04/socialism-european-western-global-south/