Roots of American Communism

Regular price €179.80
A01=Theodore Draper
A01=Victor W. Turner
American Communist Movement
American Communists
American Disciples
American Left Wing
American Socialist Movement
American Socialist Party
Anton Pannekoek
Author_Theodore Draper
Author_Victor W. Turner
Benjamin Gitlow
Category=NH
Central Executive Committee
communist
Communist Labor Party
Communist Parties
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Eugene Victor Debs
federations
foreign
Foreign Language Federations
international revolutionary networks
labor
labor activism early 20th century
language
left
Louis Fraina
Marxist theory analysis
Michigan Group
movement
Open Communist Party
origins of US leftist organizations
party
political factionalism study
radical political history
Robert Minor
Russian Federation
socialist
Socialist Labor Party
socialist movements USA
State Secretary
Theodore Draper
Trade Union Educational League
United Communist Party
Western Communists
wing
Young People's Socialist League
Young People’s Socialist League
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138538351
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this definitive history of the evolution of the Com- munist Party in America--from its early background through its founding in 1919 to its emergence as a legal entity in the 1920s--Theodore Draper traces the native and foreign strains that comprised the party. He emphasizes its shifting policies and secrets as well as its open activities. He makes clear how the party in its infancy "was transformed from a new expression of American radicalism to the American appendage of a Russian revolutionary power," a fact that Draper develops in his succeeding volume, American Communism and Soviet Russia.

In his special, prescient way, Theodore Draper himself had the final words on American Communism: "It is like a museum of radical politics. In its various stages, it has virtually been all things to all men... There are many ways of trying to understand such a movement, but the first task is historical. In some respects, there is no other way to understand it, or at least to avoid seriously misunderstanding it. Every other approach tends to be static, one-sided or unbalanced."

Draper correctly notes that the formative period of the American Communist movement has remained a largely untold and even unknown story. In part, the reasons for this are that the Communist movement, although a child of the West, grew to power in the Soviet East. But Draper rescues this chapter with deep appreciation for the fact that communism was not something that happened just in Russia, but also in the United States. This is a must read for scholars and laypersons alike.

This volume is conceived as an independent and self-contained study of the American Communist movement. Draper correctly notes that the formative period is largely untold and even unknown. In part, the reasons for this are that the Communist movement, although a child of the West, grew to power in the Soviet East. Draper appreciates the fact that communism was not something that happened only in Russia, but also took place in the United States. That experience is the focus of this volume.