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Forgotten Radicals: Communists in the Pennsylvania Anthracite, 1919-1950

Autor Walter T. Howard
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 ian 2005
This detailed investigation of Communists and their Party in the hard coal fields of northeastern Pennsylvania, known as the Anthracite, draws on sources such as the central archives of the Communist Party of the United States to examine the origins, growth, and decline of the relatively small but active Marxist-Leninist organization that operated there during the first half of the 20th century. Anthracite. Just mentioning the name of the hard coal region of Pennsylvania conjures up classic images of labor violence and class conflict: Molly Maguires, Lattimer and the 1902 national coal strike. Yet this legendary tradition of labor and class discord has prompted no historian to chronicle the complete story of the region's largest and most active radical group in the 20th century: American Communists. They are forgotten radicals. Chronicling the story of these forgotten radicals allows us to examine American Communism in an important area of the highly industrialized state of Pennsylvania where a major capitalist enterprise, the hard coal industry, employed a large contingent of immigrant workers for about half of the 20th century. To be sure, studying these radicals permits us to explore the overall historical pattern of American Communism_the founding of the Party in 1919, the challenges of the 1920s, the heyday of the thirties, the turns of World War II, and the decline during the McCarthy period_in a regional context. Thus, Forgotten Radicals fills a niche in local studies of rank and file Communist activity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780761830917
ISBN-10: 076183091X
Pagini: 284
Dimensiuni: 142 x 215 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 List of Tables
Chapter 2 Preface
Chapter 3 Acknowledgments
Chapter 4 Anthracite Reds
Chapter 5 Communists and Miners, 1922-1926
Chapter 6 Eve of the Third Period
Chapter 7 National Textile Workers Union
Chapter 8 The National Miners Union
Chapter 9 Communists Organize the Unemployed, 1930-1932
Chapter 10 Giving Voice to the Miners' Discontent
Chapter 11 Communists and the Unemployed, 1933-1934
Chapter 12 Toward the Popular Front
Chapter 13 The Popular Front
Chapter 14 The Workers Alliance and the CIO
Chapter 15 Antifascism and the Democratic Front
Chapter 16 World War II
Chapter 17 Cold War Meltdown
Chapter 18 Notes
Chapter 19 Bibliography
Chapter 20 About the Author
Chapter 21 Index

Recenzii

Exhaustively mining archival, newspaper, and secondary sources as well as over a dozen interviews, Howard has written a solid....study surely destined to be the last word on his subject.Summing Up: RECOMMENDED. Graduate students and faculty.
Howard investigates the "Anthracite Reds," who operated in the home ground of the Molly Maguires and the Lattimer massacre. He shows how conditions were ripe for members of the Communist Parts there to attempt to organize resistance to the overwhelming power of the mine owners, sustain unemployed miners in the Depression, support labor unions, and lead opposition to local fascist organizations before World War II. He also shows how the Cold War made it nearly impossible for a miner to declare himself a communist and remain in the anthracite.
Howard carefully tells the story of how the indigenous leaders and members of the anthracite party struggled to build their organization from 1919. Howard's narrative does not support either the traditional view of the party's subservience to the Cominternnor revisionist views of the part as a genuine form of American radicalism. Instead, Howard documents the rather stormy history of party line changes, as well as local issues championed by the largely immigrant workers who led the party in the anthracite region....As such,Forgotten Radicals makes a significant contribution to the literature on local Communist Party history and gives much to historians of the anthracite region, historians of the Communist Party, and labor historians in general.