"In Militant Acts, a deep philosophical query traverses a minute historical reconstruction of the militant investigation in the history of Marxism … The book will surely become a reference on the issue … it is a brilliantly executed foray into an issue that deserves much more attention from academics and activists alike." — Marx & Philosophy Review of Books"Militant Acts is a timely and original monograph that makes a convincing case for the practice as well as the study of militant investigations." — Radical Philosophy Review"This slim volume provides a fascinating survey of not only the wide variety in the forms of militant investigation but also their sources, purpose, and their mixture of success … Militant Acts should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in the ways the tools of social science have been used by Marxists of the past in their efforts to both understand capitalist society and to replace it." — New Political Science"Marcelo Hoffman's Militant Acts is an important contribution to a growing body of writing that seeks to understand how research and organising can be combined … While broader and more heterodox than other existing accounts, it draws out the importance of learning from the past to inform struggles today. The challenges and opportunities of investigation are laid out to the reader. In the spirit of this history the book should not only be read, but then also interpreted in investigations that seek to understand how capitalism has changed today—not as an intellectual pursuit, but as part of a project of radical transformation." — Global Labour Journal"…[an] excellent book … in Militant Acts Hoffman has shown that there is much to learn from these histories of militant investigation, not as models to be copied, but rather as examples of attempts to forge new tools for responding to ever-changing but always demanding circumstances." — Ephemera"…Militant Acts makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the pre-history of the GIP and UCFML's investigative practices … it has much to offer to anyone interested in a radical politics of knowledge today." — Contemporary Political Theory"This book uniquely brings together approaches and methodologies and studies comparatively the inquiry, across political and faction lines, countries and continents. The author uses a truly impressive and widespread array of resources and—significantly—across several languages." — British Journal of Industrial Relations"The kind of archival and synthetic work on investigations that this book evinces has been accomplished nowhere else. Hoffman's survey provides the reader with an understanding of how investigations fit into the theoretical practice of many important Marxist thinkers, along with an argument for their utility. Further, original insights into these thinkers, which enhance or even contradict our available understandings with better historical evidence, are offered." — William S. Lewis, author of Louis Althusser and the Traditions of French Marxism"Hoffman focuses on a distinctive, yet little recognized practice of resistance and shows how it impacts and is impacted by the theories of ideology and power in which it was employed. The scholarship is not only sound, but truly pathbreaking in its treatment of various traditions, languages, and even its usage of extremely diverse source materials." — Kevin Thompson, DePaul University