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Joshua Clover
Joshua Clover
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Joshua Clover (December 30, 1962 – April 26, 2025) was an American poet, writer, professor of English and comparative literature at the University of California, Davis.

Key Information

Clover was a published scholar, poet, critic, and journalist whose work has been translated into more than a dozen languages; his scholarship on the political economy of riots has been widely influential in political theory. He appeared in three editions of The Best American Poetry and two times in Best Music Writing, and received an individual grant from the NEA as well as fellowships from the Cornell Society for the Humanities, the University of California Humanities Research Institute, and Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick. His first book of poetry, Madonna anno domini, received the Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets in 1996.

Background

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Born in San Francisco, California, a graduate of Boston University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Clover was a professor of English Literature and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Davis, and was the distinguished Holloway poet-in-residence at the University of California, Berkeley in 2002–2003.[1]

Clover's given name at birth was Joshua Miller Kaplan but via legal change he took his mother's maiden name. He has a sister named Greta. His mother, Carol J. Clover, is the originator of the final girl theory in a book on horror films and a professor emerita at the University of California, Berkeley.

Clover died on April 26, 2025, at the age of 62.[2][3] The Marxist Institute for Research announced his death.[4]

Scholarship

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Clover's scholarly books in addition to many articles and book chapters have all in various ways considered changes to daily life, work, politics, and social struggle since the Sixties. Originally studying poetry, music, and film, he focused since the 2008 economic crisis directly on political-economic matters. Basic concerns include the array of changes wrought by deindustrialization in the west, the decline of the United States empire and the future of global capitalism. Particular focuses run from the rise of office work to the nature of financialization, from the world after the end of the Soviet project to the transformations of social movements, all considered within the framework of Marxist value theory, with a particular interest in racialized regimes of power and struggle against state and capital. Riot.Strike.Riot: the New Era of Uprisings, a widely cited study translated into five languages other than English, "offers a decidedly materialist theory of the riot and sketches a unique history of the return of the riot to the center of social struggles";[5] the Chicago Tribune called it "timely and audacious."[6]

In addition to his scholarship he was a journalist since the Nineties. He contributed columns, often on popular culture and politics, to various journals, including the column "Pop and Circumstance" for The Nation and "Marx and Coca-Cola" for Film Quarterly. He was a senior writer and editor at The Village Voice and Spin. He contributed to The New York Times, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and many other venues, sometimes under the name "Jane Dark."

Poetry

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Clover published three volumes of poetry in addition to shorter works for which he won various prizes and fellowships; poems have been anthologized in multiple volumes and languages, including the Norton Introduction to Literature (10th edition, 2009). His poetry often concerns the life of great cities and the twilight character of late modernity, particularly the way it is entangled with the products of overdeveloped capitalism (especially the pleasures of popular music) and how we will have to forsake all of those pleasures for our freedom. Judith Butler has written that "In this brilliant volume, the fragmented world of a late and lost modernity has its own moving and lucid affect, its forms of aliveness."[7] Increasingly his work concerned direct political struggle; as one reviewer noted, "Few books, let alone books of poetry, arrive boasting a blurb from Entertainment Weekly while simultaneously, and aggressively, declaring the attempt to establish a Marxist lyric praxis."[8] Clover has also translated poetry from the Dutch and French, including the book Tarnac: A Preparatory Act, by Jean-Marie Gleize.[9]

He was a co-founder, along with Jasper Bernes and Juliana Spahr, of the poetry press Commune Editions. In 2020, the press was awarded the American Book Award as the best publisher in the United States.[10]

Political work

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Clover wrote extensively about the campus movements against tuition increases and student debt, about the Occupy movement, and about free speech and policing both on and off the university campus. In January 2012, he and eleven students at the University of California, Davis, engaged in a sit-in to protest the financial arrangements between U.S. Bank and the university, permanently closing the bank branch along with ending the university's particular arrangements with the bank. The protesters, who became known as the "Davis Dozen," were charged with "obstructing movement in a public place and conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor."[11] One month before the trial was scheduled to begin, the Davis Dozen accepted a plea deal from the Yolo County District Attorney. Under the terms of that agreement, the protesters received an infraction notice ticket and agreed to perform 80 hours of community service.[12]

Controversy

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Nick Irvin, in a February 2019 opinion piece for The California Aggie, drew attention to published comments by Clover suggesting he was in favor of killing police.[13] Among them was the September 2015 SFWeekly interview statement by Clover: "People think that cops need to be reformed. They need to be killed."[14] Clover also was reported by CBS Sacramento to have tweeted in November 2014 "I am thankful that every living cop will one day be dead, some by their own hand, some by others, too many of old age", and in December of that year "it’s easier to shoot cops when their backs are turned".[15]

In response to all media requests for comment, Clover said only, "On the day that police have as much to fear from literature professors as Black kids do from police, I will definitely have a statement. Until then, I have nothing further to add." In March 2019 California State Assemblyman James Gallagher gathered over 10,000 signatures on a petition calling for Clover to be fired.[16] UC Davis Chancellor Gary May replied in a letter to Gallagher that "Professor Clover’s statements, although offensive and abhorrent, do not meet the legal requirement for 'true threats' that might exempt them from First Amendment protection. . . . Accordingly, the university will not proceed with review or investigation of concerns regarding Professor Clover’s public statements."[17]

Books

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  • Madonna anno domini: Poems. Louisiana State University Press. January 1, 1997. ISBN 978-0-8071-2147-4. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  • The Matrix (British Film Institute, 2004), 128 pp.
  • The Totality for Kids. University of California Press. 2006. ISBN 978-0-520-24599-0. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  • 1989: Bob Dylan Didn't Have This to Sing About. University of California Press. October 7, 2009. ISBN 978-0-520-94464-0. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  • Red Epic. Commune Editions, Oakland 2015 ISBN 978-1934639160
  • Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of Uprisings. Verso, London & Brooklyn 2016 ISBN 1784780596
  • Roadrunner. Duke University Press, Durham 2021.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Joshua Clover (1962–2025) was an American poet, cultural critic, and academic who held a professorship in English and comparative literature at the , focusing on , , and . His scholarly output included analyses of literature's intersection with , notably in Riot. Strike. Riot (Verso, 2016), which frames contemporary urban riots as evolved forms of proletarian action amid the decline of traditional strikes in post-industrial . Clover also published poetry collections such as The Totality for Kids (, 2006), blending modernist influences with themes of totality and crisis. Clover engaged in activist circles, contributing writings on the movement and campus protests against tuition hikes, viewing them through lenses of class antagonism and anti-capitalist resistance. His public statements provoked backlash, particularly remarks in a 2015 asserting that police "need to be killed" in scenarios of revolutionary upheaval, and tweets celebrating reductions in police presence, which critics linked to heightened anti-law-enforcement following incidents like the 2019 murder of a Davis officer. These positions, rooted in his theoretical advocacy for dismantling state apparatuses in class war, underscored tensions between and public safety concerns, though UC Davis declined to discipline him for the expressions. Clover died on April 26, 2025, at age 62.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Joshua Clover was born on December 30, 1962, in Berkeley, California. His birth name was Joshua Miller Kaplan, which he legally changed to his mother's maiden name, Clover. Clover's mother, Carol J. Clover, was a prominent medievalist and film theorist who joined the faculty at the University of California, Berkeley, in the early 1960s. In a 2022 interview, she confirmed giving birth to her son Joshua in 1962 while pursuing graduate studies and beginning her academic career in Berkeley. He had an older sister, Greta, born in 1961. Little is publicly documented about his father, though accounts indicate limited involvement in Clover's life. Clover grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s and 1970s, an environment shaped by the and countercultural influences, amid his mother's rising academic prominence. Specific details of his childhood experiences remain sparse in available records, with no verified accounts of formative events beyond the familial and intellectual milieu of a university town.

Academic Training

Joshua Clover received his degree in English literature from in 1987. His undergraduate studies emphasized literary analysis and writing, laying the foundation for his subsequent work in and criticism. Following his BA, Clover pursued graduate training at the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop, earning a in in 1991. The program, renowned for its intensive focus on and , provided rigorous workshop-based instruction under established , honing Clover's craft in verse composition and form. This MFA represented the extent of his formal advanced academic credentials, as he did not pursue a doctoral degree. His training thus centered on creative practice rather than theoretical scholarship, aligning with his early publications in .

Professional Career

Journalism and Music Criticism

Joshua Clover began his career in music journalism as a senior writer for Spin magazine in the late 1990s and early 2000s, where he contributed album reviews and features analyzing contemporary pop and rock music. His tenure at Spin ended abruptly in September 2001, shortly after the 9/11 attacks, when the magazine requested revisions to his review of Party Music by the hip-hop group The Coup. The album's original cover art depicted the Twin Towers exploding and the Capitol Building in flames, imagery that became highly controversial post-attacks; Spin sought to distance itself by altering the art and softening coverage, but Clover refused to amend his positive assessment of the record's political content and artistic merit, leading to his resignation. This incident, later recounted by Clover in a 2015 Twitter thread titled "#HowIQuitSpin," highlighted tensions between editorial pressures and critical independence in music journalism during a period of heightened national sensitivity. Clover also wrote extensively for The Village Voice, serving as a columnist and editor while contributing music and cultural criticism, often under the pseudonym Jane Dark for reviews of albums and films that interrogated genre conventions and social implications. His Village Voice pieces, spanning the early 2000s, included essays on topics like the cultural resonance of pop music and its intersections with politics, such as a 2001 critique of The New Yorker's approach to popular culture that accused the publication of deeming pop "beneath discussion." These writings emphasized Clover's approach to criticism as a form of theoretical engagement rather than mere consumer guidance, frequently drawing on historical and economic contexts to evaluate musical works. Beyond Spin and , Clover's journalism appeared in outlets like and selections in Best Music Writing anthologies, where his pieces on artists ranging from to late-1980s hip-hop and showcased a commitment to dissecting music's role in broader . His reviews often privileged —examining , production, and cultural positioning—over subjective taste, reflecting a shift from traditional rockist paradigms toward a more interdisciplinary lens influenced by his emerging scholarly interests. This body of work established Clover as a bridge between journalistic music writing and academic , though his journalistic output diminished as he transitioned to full-time academia by the mid-2000s.

Academic Appointments and Teaching

Clover was appointed to the English Department at the University of California, Davis in 2003, initially as a professor of poetry and poetics. He subsequently held joint positions in the departments of English and Comparative Literature, where he taught critical and political theory, while serving as affiliated faculty in French and Italian, Cultural Studies, the Film Studies Program, and the Designated Emphasis in Critical Theory. From 2019 onward, he also maintained an affiliated professorship in Literature and Modern Culture at the University of Copenhagen. In 2016, Clover served as Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Paris VIII. He additionally directed the Marxist Institute for Research, an entity focused on interdisciplinary Marxist scholarship. Clover's teaching emphasized 20th-century literature in , and intersections of literature with political and economic theory, including . Specific courses he taught at UC Davis included ENL 010C ( in English III, a survey of 20th-century literatures), ENL 045 (Introductory Topics in ), English 168 (covering American Cultures, , , and writing experience), and a post-1600 literature seminar titled "riot-strike-riot," which examined phases of political unrest. He also instructed in critical theory, film studies, and comparative , often integrating analyses of class struggle and revolt. Earlier in his career, Clover received the University Prize for Excellence in Teaching in 1991, during his time associated with the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Student evaluations of his courses varied, with some noting rigorous reading loads and demanding participation, though his overall instructor rating stood at 75 out of 100 based on aggregated feedback.

Literary Output

Poetry Collections

Clover's first poetry collection, Madonna anno domini, was published by Louisiana State University Press in 1997. This volume established his early voice, drawing on influences from his academic training in . His second collection, The Totality for Kids, followed in 2006 from the as part of the New California Poetry series. The work explores themes of totality and childhood in a fragmented contemporary landscape, reflecting Clover's evolving interest in systemic critique through poetic form. In 2015, Clover published Red Epic with Commune Editions, a press associated with radical literary output. This collection marks a shift toward more explicitly political and poetics, incorporating elements of epic narrative amid economic and social upheaval. These three volumes constitute the core of his poetic bibliography, with selections from his work appearing in anthologies such as The Best American Poetry.

Scholarly and Theoretical Works

Joshua Clover's scholarly and theoretical works primarily explore the intersections of , , and cultural forms through a materialist lens. His analyses draw on historical transformations in to interpret contemporary crises, emphasizing shifts in modes of struggle and aesthetic representation. Key publications include examinations of protest dynamics and popular music's socio-historical embeddedness, grounded in empirical observations of events from the onward. In Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of Uprisings, published by in 2016, Clover delineates the historical succession of and strike as dominant forms. He contends that riots, prevalent in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as responses to subsistence crises, were supplanted by strikes during the industrial era's focus on production and wage relations. Since the and the rise of finance capital, riots have reemerged as "riot prime"—a mutated form addressing crises in the circulation of capital, manifesting in urban spaces of consumption rather than workplaces. This framework interprets events like the 2014 and 2015 Baltimore riots as emblematic of non-labor struggles against racialized dispossession and economic sclerosis, where targets distribution circuits amid declining organized labor power. Clover's causal reasoning prioritizes capital's structural recomposition over voluntarist or identitarian explanations, though critics note the theory's abstraction from specific actors' agency. Clover's earlier theoretical contribution, 1989: Bob Dylan Didn't Have This to Sing About (University of California Press, 2009), reframes the titular year as a conjunctural pivot in late , coinciding with the Berlin Wall's fall on November 9, , and the attendant narrative of history's endpoint. He links this to the crystallization of disparate pop genres—acid house, , and —as symptomatic responses to postmodern fragmentation and neoliberal ascendancy. Through close readings of tracks like Public Enemy's (1990, rooted in 1989 contexts) and Nirvana's early demos, Clover argues that pop music's lyrical negativity and formal innovations encoded the contradictions of a unipolar world order, challenging triumphalist accounts by revealing submerged class and racial tensions. The work integrates with economic critique, positing 1989 not as closure but as the onset of intensified global antagonisms. Clover extended his materialist approach to literary forms in Class War: A Literary History (, 2023), tracing depictions of class antagonism across nineteenth- and twentieth-century novels and poetry. He examines how realist and modernist aesthetics mediate conflicts between capital and labor, from Balzac's bourgeois ascendance to proletarian literature's confrontations with accumulation. This volume underscores narrative's role in formalizing economic causality, analyzing texts as sites where value production and clash, informed by Clover's ongoing engagement with Marxist value theory. Beyond monographs, Clover contributed peer-reviewed articles on topics like and value in expanded fields, often critiquing autonomist tendencies in favor of circulation-focused analyses. These works, published in journals such as Mediations, reinforce his emphasis on as the terrain of theoretical intervention, prioritizing structural determinations over conjunctural exceptionalism.

Other Writings

Clover produced a range of cultural criticism and essays beyond his poetry and primary theoretical monographs, often focusing on , music, and . His 2004 book , published by the British Film Institute, examines the film's digital effects, philosophical underpinnings, and fusion of cinema with video game aesthetics, portraying it as a messianic blending and conspiracy thriller elements. Similarly, 1989: Bob Dylan Didn't Have This to Sing About (University of California Press, 2009) analyzes the social and historical context of late-1980s and early-1990s , tracing connections among genres like , , and amid post-Cold War shifts. In journalism and periodical contributions, Clover wrote extensively on music and media. He contributed to The Village Voice, including pieces critiquing the dismissal of pop music as unworthy of serious analysis. His essays appeared in The Nation, such as "Shelf Life" (2011), which engaged with literary and cultural topics. Other outlets included Film Quarterly for film analysis and The New York Times Sunday Book Review for reviews. In academic-adjacent criticism, he co-authored "Critical Karaoke" (2002), a collaborative project on music interpretation involving critics like Greil Marcus. Clover's music-focused essays advocated for a " of replenishment," urging broader narratives beyond canonical rock nostalgia to encompass evolving popular forms. He received the Robert D. Richardson Award for Non-Fiction Writing in 1999 and inclusions in Best Writing anthologies for 2007 and 2009. These works reflect his materialist approach to cultural artifacts, linking to economic and without subordinating to ideological .

Political Involvement

Activism in Social Movements

Clover actively participated in the , which emerged in 2011 as a decentralized against and corporate influence. He engaged in actions affiliated with Occupy Oakland, a particularly militant iteration known for its confrontations with police and emphasis on , including attempts to occupy buildings like the in . In January and February 2012, Clover joined eleven UC Davis students in a series of sit-ins and blockades targeting the U.S. Bank branch located in the university's Memorial Union Building, framing the action as resistance to financial institutions' role in rising tuition costs and of . The protesters, dubbed the "Davis Dozen" or "Bankers' Dozen," occupied the premises peacefully, conducting teach-ins and preventing operations, which ultimately forced U.S. Bank to shutter the branch permanently in March 2012 and terminate its contract with the university. The participants, including Clover, faced arrest on charges of obstructing movement in a public place and conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor, with potential penalties including up to one year in jail and $1 million in damages sought by the bank; the cases were resolved in 2013 without incarceration or fines, validating the protest's tactical success in achieving its demands. Prior to Occupy, Clover had been arrested during the 2009 California university protests, a wave of student-led occupations and strikes against budget cuts, fee hikes, and administrative policies amid the global , which presaged broader anti-austerity mobilizations. He also supported ongoing protest efforts by conducting "know your rights" trainings for participants navigating legal risks in demonstrations.

Theoretical Frameworks on Revolt and Economy

In Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of Uprisings (2016), Joshua Clover articulates a Marxist-inflected framework linking contemporary revolts to structural shifts in capitalist accumulation, positing the as the ascendant form of class antagonism amid a prolonged crisis of value. He historicizes through the triad "-strike- prime," tracing riots to pre-industrial struggles in the sphere of circulation (e.g., price-setting and consumption), strikes to the industrial era's focus on production (e.g., factory-floor from the 19th to mid-20th century), and " prime" to post-1973 dynamics where circulation predominates following and profitability declines. This sequence maps onto capital's circuit—M-C...P...C'-M'—with riots contesting initial circulation (C-M), strikes production (P), and modern riots the terminal phase of realized value (C'-M'), reflecting capital's retreat from valorization in production toward , , and exclusionary circuits. Clover grounds this periodization in , arguing that the "long " since —marked by falling profit rates, , and the expansion of a racially stratified surplus population—has rendered the industrial proletariat's strike obsolete as the paradigmatic revolt. Empirical indicators include the sharp decline in U.S. major work stoppages, averaging 310 annually from 1947 to 1981 but dropping to just 7 by 2017, correlating with riots' resurgence in events like the 2014 Ferguson uprising or 2011 disturbances, which target state violence and infrastructural choke points rather than workplaces. Riots, in his view, embody a "theory of " by manifesting in zones of circulation where dispossessed populations confront not only economic but the state's role in enforcing value extraction, such as through policing surplus labor rendered unemployable. This framework emphasizes causal realism in revolt's economic determinants: riots arise from capital's internal contradictions, particularly the overproduction of relative surplus population unable to realize value, leading to intensified primitive accumulation via debt, precarity, and carceral mechanisms. Clover draws on Marx's Capital to critique circulation's fetishized appearance as mere exchange, revealing it as a site of intensified class war where "the economy is far and the state is near," as in blockades of highways or ports that disrupt commodity flows. While acknowledging riots' dual forms—economic destruction and looting—he prioritizes their role in prefiguring "commune" formations, transitional assemblages beyond riot or strike, though he cautions against romanticizing them absent broader value-form abolition. Critics, including Marxist reviewers, have contested the rigidity of this bifurcation, arguing it underplays ongoing production struggles or hybrid forms, but Clover maintains the shift's empirical primacy in explaining 21st-century uprisings' spatial and tactical logic.

Controversies

Rhetoric on Police and Violence

Joshua Clover has framed police as enforcers of capitalist interests, arguing in his theoretical work that they primarily serve to protect commodity circulation rather than public safety, and thus require abolition to address systemic . In his 2016 book Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Class War, From Bakunin to Occupy, Clover posits riots as a legitimate response to economic , where against —and implicitly the police who defend it—signals breakdown in the maintained by law enforcement. He contends that police is inherent to their role in managing proletarian unfreedom, stating in a 2015 that "cops exist to protect capital" and that effective resistance necessitates their elimination, interpreting abolition as the pathway to curtailing officer deaths. Clover's rhetoric escalated in public statements that drew widespread condemnation for appearing to endorse violence against individual officers. On December 21, 2014, he tweeted, "I am thankful that every living cop will one day be dead, some by cop killers," in the context of unrest following police killings like Michael Brown's in . This followed similar sentiments, including a September 17, 2015, interview where he described police as "the army of capital" whose role demands confrontation, later summarized by critics as advocating that "cops need to be killed." These statements resurfaced in February 2019 after the fatal shooting of a police officer, prompting outrage from law enforcement groups and Assemblyman James Gallagher, who demanded Clover's termination via legislation targeting tenured faculty inciting violence. Clover responded by reiterating that "the most effective way to end any violence against officers is the complete and immediate abolition of ," framing his position as anti-institutional rather than personal threats. The University of California, Davis administration condemned the remarks as "abhorrent" on March 28, 2019, but declined to investigate or discipline Clover, citing and tenure protections under the First Amendment, despite petitions from over 1,000 signers including police unions. This episode highlighted tensions between radical academic discourse and public safety concerns, with defenders arguing Clover's words critiqued systemic power rather than inciting imminent harm, while critics, including the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), warned of selective free speech application. No charges or further institutional action followed, though the rhetoric aligned with Clover's broader advocacy in and contexts, where he justified riotous violence as communicative in the absence of strike efficacy.

Academic and Interpersonal Disputes

In 2018, UC Berkeley associate professor Ivonne del Valle accused UC Davis professor of hacking her electronic devices and engaging in electronic stalking through anonymous accounts that allegedly posted coded references to her personal activities, such as French lessons and music preferences. The accusations stemmed from interactions beginning in spring 2018, when del Valle, who had followed Clover on and publicly criticized his anti-police statements as endangering students, met him at academic conferences and socially on two occasions. Clover denied the claims, asserting no involvement in any hacking or anonymous posting, and instead filed complaints against del Valle for repeated unwanted contacts, including uninvited visits to his apartment where she left notes, emails and calls to his colleagues and family (including ten calls in 90 minutes on one occasion), creation of a fake account impersonating him, and acts such as chalking messages at his mother's home and dumping rotten food there. Cybersecurity analyses commissioned by del Valle found inconclusive or no evidence of hacking attributable to Clover, and police reports she filed yielded no charges. Three separate investigations by UC Berkeley's Office for the Prevention of Harassment and Discrimination (OPHD), conducted in 2019, 2021, and 2022, determined that del Valle had violated university policies on , , and no-contact orders, with no substantiation for her allegations against Clover. As a result, del Valle was placed on paid in 2023, barred from campus and teaching, and faced recommendations for dismissal or an 18-month unpaid suspension, which she rejected. Clover, citing safety concerns, relocated his residence and ceased social media use during the ordeal. The case prompted protests at UC Berkeley under the #Justice4Ivonne campaign, where students and supporters demanded del Valle's reinstatement, portraying her as a victimized woman of color targeted by institutional despite the investigative findings. Actions included a March 2023 rally of about 50 people to the chancellor's office, disruptions of a USC football game on October 28, 2023 (leading to 15 arrests), and interruptions of a concert, with threats of hunger strikes. Del Valle expressed regret for some actions but maintained her victimization, while protesters like student Emily Chamale described her as "a desperate woman of color asking for help." No further academic sanctions against Clover were reported from this dispute.

Death and Posthumous Recognition

Circumstances of Death

Joshua Clover died on April 26, 2025, at the age of 62. The , Department of English, where he had been a of English and since 2003, confirmed his death in an announcement on May 2, 2025, noting his roles as a theorist, scholar, editor, and . His passing followed a brief and mysterious illness, as reported by comrades and publishers associated with his political and literary work. The official cause was not publicly disclosed by UC Davis or his family, though unverified accounts from university community discussions suggested possible complications from serious lung problems that Clover had mentioned to students earlier in the spring 2025 term. No autopsy details or medical records have been released to substantiate these claims.

Ongoing Influence and Critiques

Clover's analysis of the shift from to as dominant forms of amid capitalism's crisis of circulation has persisted in scholarly discourse on social unrest. His 2016 book Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of Uprisings frames riots not as aberrant violence but as adaptive responses to and logistics-dominated economies, influencing examinations of events like the 2020 protests and global supply chain disruptions. This perspective has been referenced in resistance studies for detailing the transition from production-based to circulation-based struggles, with over 250 ratings averaging 3.83 by 2025 reflecting its reach among activists and theorists. Posthumously, a 2024 interview highlighted its relevance to ongoing debates on riots versus communes as insurrectionary forms, underscoring Clover's role in theorizing "where people struggle." Critics, however, have faulted Clover's prioritization of riot aesthetics for underemphasizing organized labor's potential and romanticizing unorganized upheaval. A 2017 review in Marx and Philosophy argued that Clover legitimizes "riot prime" by minimizing its inherent against capitalist crises, potentially overlooking strategic limitations in sustaining long-term change. Similarly, a 2018 Jacobin assessment praised his of capitalist turbulence but contended that claims of economic "slowing down" via falling profit rates lack empirical rigor, risking an overreliance on over class strategy. In broader exchanges, such as a 2023 Verso debate with Walter Benn Michaels and Adolph Reed Jr., Clover's co-authored defense of anti-racist praxis was critiqued for subordinating class to intersectional frameworks, reflecting tensions within leftist where academic sources often amplify identity over materialist critiques. Despite these points, Clover's integration of poetry, Marxism, and political economy endures in interdisciplinary fields, with tributes post-2025 death from outlets like The Nation and Poetry Foundation affirming his influence on militant poetics and crisis theory, though such commemorations from left-leaning institutions may overlook dissenting voices on his advocacy for direct confrontation. His unfinished work on communes against the value-form, noted in Verso memorials, suggests potential extensions critiqued for idealizing prefigurative politics amid empirical failures of past revolts.

References

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