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See
Also: Daily list
of files updated (automatically generated)
30
October, 2005: To the Swedish Language
Section of the Marxists Internet Archive in the Swedish Marx-Engels
Archive is added Karl Marx's Economic & Philosophical
Manuscripts, The Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right
and some other works.
I judefrågan,
Karl Marx, 1843
Till kritiken av
den hegelska rättsfilosofin, Karl Marx, 1843
Till kritiken av
den hegelska rättsfilosofin - inledning., Karl Marx, 1844
Ekonoisk-filosofiska manuskript, Karl Marx, 1844
Utkast till en
kritik av nationalekonomin, Friedrich Engels, 1844
Randanmärkningar till Adolph Wagners lärobok i politisk
ekonomi, Karl Marx, 1880
[Thanks
to Jonas Holmgren]
30 October, 2005: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added
the following 7 original documents from the history of early American Marxism
focusing on the early Communist Party’s relationship with the Communist
International and the USSR. Much of the work this week has went into structural
changes of the Early American Marxism site. The parallel "Depression Era" site has
been folded and the time frame of EAM is being expanded to 1946. In addition,
documents may now be searched chronologically without regard to the issuing
organization, easily accessible with a pull-down menu (big thanks to Andy Blunden
for getting the menu functional!).
An Appeal to the Investigating Committee of the NEC. [Jan. 13, 1915] A very
rare document, published as part of a special English language edition by the
Duluth Finnish-language newspaper Sosialisti. This extremely lengthy article
details the faction fight which raged in the Socialist Party’s Finnish Language
Federation from 1912-15, in which the constructive socialist Eastern District and
those around its organ Raivaaja captured effective control of Executive Committee
of the Federation the leftist organ of the Middle District, Työmies.
In response, a new left wing daily newspaper was established in the Middle
District, Sosialisti.
Organize National Council for Protection of Foreign Born: News Release from the
Workers Party of America Press Service,Jan. 23, 1923. News release from the
Workers Party Press Service announcing the formation of a National Council for
Protection of the Foreign Born. The new organization had been "initiated" by the
Workers Party at its 2nd National Convention, held in December of 1922, according to
the press release.
Statement to
the Members of the Society for Technical Aid to Soviet Russia, by C.E.
Ruthenberg [circa Feb. 1923] The Society for Technical Aid to Soviet Russia was
established by the Communist Party as a parallel mass organization dedicated to
fundraising to purchase tools and agricultural machinery for Soviet Russia.
Letter
from Robert Minor in New York to the Editorial Committee, WPA, February 24,
1923. A lengthy letter from member of the Workers Party of America Editorial
Committee Robert Minor to his colleagues bluntly critical about the failings of the
party press. Keying on the English language weekly, The Worker, Minor cites
failings of both form and content, arguing the massive and bold masthead of the
publication makes it nearly impossible to run "scare headlines" which catch
attention.
Communists Throw Challenge In Face of Michigan Authorities: Ten of Participants in
Bridgman Convention Walk into Courtroom at St. Joseph, by C.E. Ruthenberg [March
10, 1923] Press release by WPA Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg detailing the
surrender en mass of 10 indicted participants at the 1922 Bridgman Convention of the
Communist Party of America, a gathering infiltrated by a government
agent-provocateur and raided by state and federal law enforcement authorities.
Rose
Pastor Stokes Gives Self Up: Walks Calmly into Court This Morning: Nine Others
Appear in Court with Gotham Woman, Charged with Attending Communist Meeting at
Bridgman . [March 10, 1923] Unsigned news report from the local St. Joseph,
Michigan daily newspaper detailing the sensational surprise surrender of 10 members
of the Communist Party under blanket indictment for participation in the ill-fated
August 1922 Bridgman Convention of the Communist Party.
Venue
Change Denied Foster: Trial Will be Started Here and Attempt Made to Get Jury.
[March 10, 1923] Unsigned news report from the local St. Joseph, Michigan daily
newspaper detailing the last minute pre-trial jousting between defense attorney
Frank P. Walsh and O.L. Gray for the prosecution.
[Thanks
to Tim Davenport]
24 October, 2005: Added to the Chinese Section:
Capital, Volume
I, Karl Marx, 1867
[Thanks to
Guo and the Chinese language section volunteers]
29 October, 2005:
Added to the James
Connolly Internet Archive:
Class Government and Class
War, 1901
Irish Trade
Union Congress, 1901
Our “American
Mission”, 1902
[Thanks to Aindrias Ó
Cathasaigh & Red Banner]
29 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’
International News Archive:
Strike
Breakers in France (1938)
France in
Transition (1939)
Conscription (1939)
The Enemy
at Home (1940)
ILP Easter
Conference: Observations and Lessons (1941)
[Thanks to
Ted Crawford]
28 October, 2005: Added to the Fourth
Internationalist Tendency—US Archive in the Encyclopaedia of
Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL),
U.S. Unions in the 1920s
and 1980s, by Frank Lovell, from Bulletin in Defense of Marxism,
publication of the Fourth Internationalist Tendency, 1986
Labor Radicalism in the
1920s and Today, by Frank Lovell, from Bulletin in Defense of
Marxism, publication of the Fourth Internationalist Tendency, 1986
[Thanks to Andrew Pollack]
28 October 2005: Added to
the Maurice Thorez
Archive:
Long
Live the Unity of the French Nation, Moscow Radio, 1944
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
28 October
2005: Added to the Blanqui
Archive:
Parisians!, 1848
[Thanks to Mitch
Abidor]
27 October
2005: Added to the Paris Commune
Archive:
General Appeal to all Jewellery Workers, 7 May 1871
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
26 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’ International
News Archive:
A British
Popular Front? (1938)
The Problem of
Poland (1939)
America’s
Growing Domination (1940)
The Real Situation
in India (1940)
Before the
Spring Offensive (1940)
Labour and
Democracy (1940)
Singapore
Strikes (1940)
Mounting Crisis in
India (1940)
Total War!
(1940)
Congress Cannot
Lead (1940)
Cabinet
Reshuffle (1940)
[Thanks to Ted
Crawford]
26 October, 2005: To the Swedish Language
Section of the Marxists Internet Archive in the Swedish Marx-Engels Archive is added
Karl Marx's Theories of Surplus-value.
Teorier om
mervärdet, Karl Marx, 1961-63, 1,2 MB
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]
25 October,
2005: Added to the Literature
Archive of the Romanian Language Section:
Împărat şi
proletar [Emperor and Proletarian, 1874] by
Mihai Eminescu.
[Thanks to Liviu Iacob]
24 October,
2005: Added to the Daniel De Leon Internet
Archive are 15 new Editorials (in PDF format) written by De Leon
at the turn of the century (1900) in The Daily People the newsapaper
of the Socialist Labor Party of America:
1900 Dec 1—Exploiting
Blunders
1900 Dec 2—Lashing the
Sea
1900 Dec 3—Death-Bed
Consultations
1900 Dec 5—Open Letter
to the Erie, Pa., “Public Ownership”
1900 Dec 7—It Works
Like “Rolling Off a Log”
1900 Dec 12—A Timely
Recommendation
1900 Dec 16—Give Them
Rope!
1900 Dec 17—The
Guerilla
1900 Dec 20—The Duryea
Will Contest
1900 Dec 22—S.L.P. Vote
in the Nation
1900 Dec 25—For a Merry
Christmas
1900 Dec 27—Holding Up
the Nation
1900 Dec 29—Burning
Candles to the Devil
1900 Dec
30—Wat-Tylering the People
1900 Dec 31—At His Old
Trade
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of America]
24 October, 2005: Added to the David Widgery Internet
Archive:
Defending Abortion
Rights, 1977 (letter)
Letter from Britain: Carnival
Against the Nazis, 1978 (letter)
Sylvia Pankhurst: Pioneer of
Working Class Feminism, 1978
[Thanks to Einde
OCallaghan]
24 October, 2005: Added to the Chinese Section
is
Ernest Mandel On
Workers’ Democracy November 1968
[Thanks to Lam and the Chinese language section volunteers]
24 October, 2005: Added to the George Novack Internet
Archive:
Ten Years of the New Deal,
1943
From Lenin to Khrushchev, 1961
[Thanks to Daniel
Gaido]
23 October, 2005: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the
following 7 original documents from the history of early American Marxism focusing
on the early Communist Party’s relationship with the Communist International
and the USSR:
A Program
of Reconstruction, by A.A. Heller [November 1, 1922] This article by the
American representative of Soviet Russia’s Supreme Council of National Economy
(Vesenkha) in the organ of the Friends of Soviet Russia indicates that while Soviet
industrial reconstruction will have to be achieved largely via Russia’s own
volition and internal financing, there are ways in which interested individuals can
aid the process from abroad.
Report on the 4th Comintern Congress to the Central Executive Committee of the
Workers Party of America, by Max Bedacht [circa December 1922]. A very
informative summary of the activities of the 4th World Congress of the Communist
International (Nov. 5-Dec. 5, 1922) as they related to the Communist Party of
America, written by WPA delegate Max Bedacht for the Central Executive Committee of
his party.
A Splendid
Opportunity, by Robert Minor [December 1922] Leading member of the Workers Party
of America Robert Minor introduces the readers of the Friends of Soviet
Russia’s official organ to the new Russian-American Industrial Corporation
(RAIC), established by Sidney Hillman of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union.
Letter
from William Z. Foster in Chicago to Grigorii Zinoviev in Moscow, February 17,
1923. A personal letter from prominent American Communist and Trade Union
Educational League founder William Z. Foster to the head of the Communist
International. Presumably, Zinoviev directed a query to Foster soliciting his
personal opinion about the “new policy” for the American Communist
movement—that is, the termination of the primary underground Communist Party
of America and the merging of that organization’s leadership with that of the
“open” Workers Party of America, with “underground” work a
subsidiary department of the new organization.
1923
Workers Party of America Ofïcial Membership Statistics. [prepared circa Jan.
1924] A complete month-by-month account of the paid membership of the Workers Party
of America expressed in terms of membership of the various language federations of
the party as well as by membership district.
Report of
the Directors and Financial Statement Submitted to Second Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of the Russian- American Industrial Corporation, Feb. 26, 1924.
From the end of 1922 onward, solicitation of funds for Soviet Russia in the United
States moved from an orientation of “aid to starving Russia” to one of
“technical assistance for Russian industrial development.”
Letter from Tom
Mooney in San Quentin Prison to Joseph Stalin in Moscow, Oct. 17, 1932. This
letter was promoted on the cover of the November 1932 issue of “The Labor
Defender,” the official organ of the CP’s legal defense organization,
International Labor Defense. While the greetings to Stalin on the occasion of the
15th anniversary of the October Revolution in Russia are largely pro forma, the
document is interesting both as a snapshot of Mooney’s personal politics
(“All Hail to the Russian Revolution and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat.
I’m for it hook, line and sinker, without equivocation or reservation.”)
as well as to the way that a Cult of Personality was beginning to emerge among the
Communist faithful even at this early date (the person of Stalin beginning to be
regarded as a human embodiment of the Russia revolution).
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
23 October, 2005: Added 20 new songs to
the Soviet
Music Subject Archive.
[Thanks to Liviu
Iacob]
19 October, 2005: Added
to the Chinese
Section’s V.I.Lenin Internet Archive:
A Protest by
Russian Social-Democrats
Our
Programme
Our Immediate
Task
Should
Revolutionaries Work in Reactionary Trade Unions? In Left-Wing Communism: an
Infantile Disorder
[Thanks to Lam and the
Chinese language section volunteers]
19 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’
International News Archive:
Deadlock in France
(1938)
India
and the War (1939)
America’s
Growing Domination (1940)
The People’s
Convention (1940)
Invasion: Arm the
Workers! (1941)
People’s
Convention and Now? (1941)
[Thanks to Ted
Crawford]
17 October, 2005: Added to the Belfort Bax Internet
Archive:
A Word for the Men, 1890 (letter)
The International Situation, 1890
(Of particular interest because of Hyndman’s chauvinistic anti-German
editorial comment at the end)
Personal Explanation, 1891
(letter)
Stanley Goes
Under, 1892 (Attack on H.M. Stanley of "Dr. Livingstone, I presume" fame)
Stanley Must Be Kept Under,
1892 (Continuation of above attack)
[Thanks to Ted
Crawford]
15 October, 2005: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the
following 9 original documents from the history of early American Marxism focusing
on the early Communist Party's relationship with the Communist International and the
various Populist and Labor Party formations:
Letter from C.E.
Ruthenberg in New York to Vasil Kolarov in Moscow, Feb. 17, 1923. This letter
from Workers Party of America Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg to General
Secretary of the ECCI Vasil Kolarov is an example in which the Comintern was used by
national parties as a mediator. Ruthenberg protests the establishment of a new
Soviet relief organization, the Volunteer Fleet, noting three relief organizations
are already in existence: the Friends of Soviet Russia, Technical Aid, and the
Yidgescom.
Report on
the American Party Situation to the Enlarged Executive Committee of the Communist
International, April 11, 1923. This is an official report by the
“Secretariat” of the Workers Party of America (C.E.
Ruthenberg—Executive Secretary; Josef Pogány—Political Secretary;
Abraham Jakira—Secretary for Confidential Work) to the Enlarged ECCI
summarizing the American party's work.
The Federated
Farmer-Labor Party,” by William Z. Foster. [August 1923] This long
day-by-day account of the founding convention of the Federated Farmer-Labor Party
(July 3-5, 1923) was written in the immediate aftermath of the gathering by William
Z. Foster.
Letter from
C.E. Ruthenberg in Chicago to Vasil Kolarov in Moscow, September 5, 1923. This
letter to the General Secretary of the Comintern was written by WPA Executive
Secretary Ruthenberg on behalf of the governing Central Executive Committee of the
party. A request is made to allow an exception to Comintern rules so that the WPA
might hold its next annual convention in December 1923 or January 1924.
To All
Labor Unions in Chicago: A Circular Letter Dated Oct. 31, 1923 by Joseph Manley
In the aftermath of the July 3-5, 1923 convention which established the Federated
Farmer-Labor Party there was a great deal of acrimony directed at the Workers Party
of America for their purported splitting of the farmer-labor movement. This letter
to Chicago unions, signed by Joseph Manley (son-in-law of William Z. Foster and
National Secretary of the FFLP) answered these charges.
Letter
from C.E. Ruthenberg in Chicago to Morris Hillquit in New York, Nov. 3, 1923. A
cryptic note sent from the Executive Secretary of the Workers Party of the member to
the leading light of the arch-rival Socialist Party of America. Ruthenberg notes
that he will be in New York on Nov. 8, 1923, and that he seeks a conference with
Hillquit to “talk with you” in regard to an invitation sent by the
Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party to labor political groups for a Nov. 15 conference in
St. Paul.
Letter
from C.E. Ruthenberg in Chicago to Osip Piatnitsky in Moscow, Nov. 19, 1923. A
lengthy and illuminating review of the Workers Party of America's Farmer-Labor Party
strategy as it rapidly evolved in the fall of 1923. Ruthenberg relates the decision
of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party to call a convention at St. Paul in May of 1924
for the purpose of joint nomination of a candidate for President of the United
States and adoption of a joint program — thereby uniting the various state
Farmer-Labor organizations, the Federated Farmer-Labor Party, and other labor and
political groups into a single organization.
Conflict in
the Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party [circa March 1924]. A
fascinating document from the Comintern archives apparently prepared as a
backgrounder for the Comintern, which was asked to mediate a factional dispute about
the line of the Workers Party with regard to the Farmer-Labor Party movement and to
electoral participation in the 1924 Presidential campaign. The document seems to
have been prepared by a partisan of the Foster-Cannon faction and subsequently
edited by a member of the Ruthenberg-Pepper faction and is written in relatively
neutral terms.
"The Death of the Socialist Party,” by J. Louis Engdahl
[October 1924].
A
final sneer at the Socialist Party from the 1924 campaign. Former editor of the
Socialist Party's offical organ Engdahl argues that the SP's immersion in the
campaign of progressive Republican Robert LaFollette for President of the United
States spells the final deathknell for the SPA: “When the Socialist Party
deserted the 'Labor Party' fight, turned its back on class action, and joined the
LaFollette straddle of the two old parties of Wall Street, its members had two
choices. They could either join the Communist forces in the Workers Party, or go
over into the LaFollette camp. Many did join the Communist ranks, singly and in
groups. The rest are going over to the temporary LaFollette organizations that will
collapse after the election day has passed.... The Socialist movement has been
swallowed up in the LaFollette wave. It has been completely obliterated."
[Thanks to Tim Davenport]
14 October, 2005: Added to the George Novack Internet
Archive:
John Dewey’s
Theories of Education, 1960
The Fate of Dewey’s Theories,
1960
[Thanks to David Walters]
14 October, 2005: Added to the Joseph Hansen Internet
Archive:
Is World War III
Inevitable? A series of 7 articles from The
Militant in 1953 which discusses war, revolution and the building of the
International.
[Thanks to David Walters]
13 October, 2005: Added to the Harry Braverman Internet
Archive:
Automation: Promise and
Menace, 1955.
Big
Business Moves in on the Farmer, 1956.
Which Way to a New American
Radicalism, 1956.
America Also Had A Revolution,
1956.
Prosperity on
Easy Payments, 1956.
Marx in the Modern World,
1958.
The Nasser
Revolution, 1959.
[Thanks to Louis Proyect &
ETOL]
13 October, 2005: Added to the Daniel De Leon
Internet Archive are 16 new Editorials (in PDF format) written by
De Leon at the turn of the century (1900) in The Daily People the
newsapaper of the Socialist Labor Party of America:
1900, November 5—They
Rally—So Shall We!
1900, November 9—Left
in the Lurch—As Usual
1900, November
10—Croker Bets Both Ways
1900, November
12—Manifest Destiny and Capitalist Morality
1900, November
14—Pettigrew’s Keen Scent
1900, November
15—Concessions? What Concessions, Pray?
1900, November 16—Who
Excuses Accuses Himself
1900, November
17—Libeling Human Nature
1900, November
19—“Labor Lieutenants” at Work
1900, November 20—The
Belgian Excuses
1900, November 22—They
Indict Themselves
1900, November
23—Mutually Illuminating Facts
1900, November 24—Using
Vice in Vice’s Interest
1900, November 25—A
Tell—Tale Phenomenon
1900, November
28—Principle Vs. Fly—Paper
1900, November 29—For
All of Which We Are Thankful
1900, November 30—They
Scent Each Other
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of America]
13 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’ International
News Archive:
The French
Betrayal, by H.R. (1939)
Sir Stafford
Cripps Stands Firm (1939)
The Cost of
Capitalism (1939)
Hitler Will March
Again – And Soon (1939)
For the Irish
Revolution (1939)
The Middle Class in
France, by H.R. (1939)
Again Sir
Stafford Creeps (1939)
International
Crossroads (1939)
The Jews
Abandoned (1939)
[Thanks to Ted
Crawford]
13 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’
International News Archive:
Policy
of Labour Lefts Leads to Defeat, by Andrew Scott (1941)
Friends of
India, by Ajit Roy (1943)
Imperialist
Perspectives for Europe, by Andrew Scott (1943)
India –
the Role of Congress Leaders, by Ajit Roy (1943)
Statement of Indian Trotskyists on Trial (1944)
[Thanks to Ted Crawford]
12 October, 2005: Added to the Daniel De Leon
Internet Archive are 22 new Editorials (in PDF format) written by
De Leon at the turn of the century (1900) in The Daily People the
newsapaper of the Socialist Labor Party of America:
Depew’s Duplicity
or Insinuating Falsehood
Pure and Simple
Weapons
Ineffectual Weapons--The
Strike
A
Yellow Liberal in a Yellow Paper
A Silver Bug, and a Lady
Bug
Immorality Breeds
Immorality
An
International Fakir
The Socialist Movement Is
No Giddy-Headed Atalanta
What Mrs. Blatch
Discovered
Richard Croker as an
Object Lesson
Gompersism, or Organized
Scabbery, Gets Its Face Slapped
The Wages of Prosperity
Suicidal Bryanism
Democratic
Blundering
Strike
for Freedom!
A
Party of “No Compromise”
Organized Scabbery Scores
Itself
Millerandism—‘The
Gospel of Love’
A Trades Union Candidate
A Real
Anti-Imperialist
The Paterson Murder
Prince at His Old Trade
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of America]
12 October, 2005: Added to the Chinese Section of
the MIA:
Ernest Mandel: An introduction to
Marxist economic theory Chapter 1: The Theory of Value and Surplus value
Leon Trotsky: The New Course
[1923]
The
Errors of Communist International “Third Period” (1930)
4 articles by Engels in the Labour Standard 1881:
A Fair Day’s
Wages for a Fair Day’s Work
The Wages
System
A
Working Men’s Party
Social Classes —
Necessary and Superfluous
Karl Marx:
For Worker
Parliament’s letter
Inaugural Address of
the International Working Men’s Association “The First
International”
Strike and worker union
(1847)
Letter of the General Council to the Alliance of Socialist Democracy (March 9,
1869)
London
exchange panic–strike (1853)
appeal to Total
committee about Lausanne representative assembly’s (1867-7)
Speech by Marx to the
First International Working Men’s Association, June 1865
Trade union (labor
union) their past, present and future (1866-8)
Worker federation
(1847)
Lin Biao:
Lin Biao Report to
the Ninth National Congress of the Communist Party of China (Delivered on April
1 and adopted on April 14, 1969)
Mao: Talk At A Meeting Of
The Central Cultural Revolution Group January 9, 1967
Herbert Marcuse: One-Dimensional Man.
Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society
[Thanks to Lam and the Chinese language section volunteers]
12 October, 2005: The Early American Marxism Archive in the USA History section of the MIA has added the
following 3 original documents from the history of early American Marxism focusing
on the founding of the Communist Party and the split from the Socialist Party by
it's left wing:
Letter
from Grigorii Zinoviev on behalf of the ECCI to the Central Executive Committee of
the CPA and National Executive Committee of the CLPA, January 12, 1920. A
seminal document in the history of the American Communist movement, the first
official statement of the position of the Communist International on the division of
the American Communist movement into two competing organizations. Zinoviev
represented the split a “heavy blow to the communist movement in
America” which was in the final analysis based upon “certain
disagreements on the question of tactics, principally questions of
organization” rather than differences of program. Zinoviev stated that the
foreign language based and theoretically more advanced Communist Party and
anglophonic Communist Labor Party were supplemental to one another and noted that
the ECCI “categorically insists” on the immediate unification of the two
organizations.
Two
Resolutions of the Executive Committee of the Communist International on America,
August 8, 1920.. Two very short ECCI resolutions on American matters. The first
sets a 2 month deadline (October 10, 1920) for amalgamation of the two American
Communist Parties.
Resolution of the Executive Committee of the Communist International on the Case of
Louis C. Fraina, Sept. 30, 1920. Full text of a leaflet published in 1920 by the
Communist Party of America detailing the absolution of Louis Fraina from charges
preferred by Santeri Nuorteva of the Russian Soviet Government Bureau in New York
that he was a secret police agent.
[Thanks to Tim
Davenport]
11 October, 2005: Added to the Ernest Mandel Internet
Archive:
In Defence of Leninism: In Defence of
the Fourth International, 1973
The Beginning of a Revision of
Marxism, 1973
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde
O’Callaghan]
Ten Theses on the Social and
Economic Laws Governing the Society Transitional Between Capitalism and Socialism,
1973
Some comments on
H. Ticktin’s Towards a Political Economy of the USSR, 1974
[Thanks to Hillel Ticktin & Critique]
10 October 2005: Added 30 new songs to the
Marxism and Music
Subject Archive.
[Thanks to Liviu
Iacob]
10 October, 2005: Added to the New International
Archive (1947-1958):
Three
Vital Court Decisions 1. The Shachtman Case, Notes of the Month, by
A.G. (1955)
Three
Vital Court Decisions 2. The Nathan Case, Notes of the Month, by Albert
Gates (1955)
Three
Vital Court Decisions 3. The Peters Case, Notes of the Month, by Julius
Falk (1955)
The
British Elections, Notes of the Month, by Gordon Haskell (1955)
Kempton’s Ruins and Monuments, by Max Martin
(1955)
Dissipating Reputations, by Abe Stein (1955)
Fictionalized Biography, by Michael Harrington (1955)
Magazine Chronicle, by Julius Falk & Abe Stein
(1955)
All articles from New International, Vol.21 No.2, Summer 1955
are now on-line.
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde
O’Callaghan]
10 October, 2005: Added to the Daniel De Leon Internet
Archive are 17 new Editorials (in PDF format) written by De Leon at the
turn of the century (1900) in The Daily People the newsapaper of the
Socialist Labor Party in the United States:
The Prayer in Politics
A Domesticated
16-to-1er
War, and
Rumors of War in the Other Political Camps
A Fakir in Ebony
Roosevelt at Chicago
An Aftermath of Shame
The Right of
Self-Defense
Walking Delegate Scabs
Not a Dangerous Man
Cardinal Gibbons, Bishop
Potter, Mark Hanna
McKinley’s Letter
The Conditions Leading to
the Expansion Cry
The Historic Side of
Expansion
The
Assumed Advantages of Expansion
Effects of Expansion
Bryan’s Insult to
Workingmen
An
Ethical Party
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of America]
10 October, 2005: Added to the Alfred Rosmer
Internet Archive:
Moscow in
Lenin’s Days: 1920-21, 1949 (extract)
[Thanks to
David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
10 October, 2005:
Added to the T.N. Vance (Ed Sard) Internet
Archive:
The Crisis
in Distribution, 1955
[Thanks to David Walters &
Einde O’Callaghan]
9 October, 2005:
Added to the Ted Grant Writers
Section in the Encyclopaedia of
Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL):
Lessons of Spain, 1938
(with Ralph Lee)
The Italian
revolution and the tasks of British workers, 1943
[Thanks to Patrik Olofsson]
9 October 2005: Added to the Chinese Communism Subject Archive:
The Origin And Development
Of The Differences Between The Leadership Of The CPSU And Ourselves
(1957-1963)
A Comment On The Statement
Of The CPUSA (March 8, 1963)
[Thanks to Mike B.]
9 October 2005: Added to the Lu Xun (Lu Hsun) Reference
Archive:
Kung I-chi (March 1919)
Reply to a Letter from the
Trotskyites (June 1936)
[Thanks to Mike B. and coldbacon.com]
9 October 2005: Added to the Anna
Louise Strong Reference Archive:
Letter to Susan
Talmadge Detweiler (December 29, 1952)
Image: La
Cañada, circa 1950 (1)
Image: La
Cañada, circa 1950 (2)
[Thanks to Mike B.]
9 October 2005: Added to the Mao Zedong Reference
Archive:
Tapoti
(Summer 1933)
[Thanks to Basu and Mike B.]
8 October 2005: Added to the C L R James
Archive:
History of the
Left Opposition, 1941
[Thanks to Daniel
Gaido]
\
6 October, 2005: Added to the New International
Archive (1940-1946):
The Struggle
on the Price Front Notes of the Month (1946)
Poland’s Political Pattern, Notes of the Month
(1946)
Paris Peace Conference, Notes of the Month (1946)
Welcome SWP
Minority, Notes of the Month (1946)
Leon Trotsky
and the Workers Party, by Ernest Erber (1946)
The Church
Struggle Under Fascism, by Leon Trotsky (1946)
Russian
Imperialism in Poland – II, by A. Rudzienski (1946)
All
articles from New International, Vol.12 No.7, September 1946 are now
on-line.
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde
O’Callaghan]
6 October, 2005: Added to the New International
Archive (1947-1958):
$500,000
Marked Void Editorial (1950)
Fact or
Fiction on Lenin’s Role, Letter from David Shub (1950)
John L.
Lewis, by Walter Jason (1950)
Burnham
Rides Again, by Peter Loumos (1950)
Key to
Asia, by Jack Brad (1950)
All articles from New
International, Vol.16 No.2, March-April 1950 are now on-line.
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
6 October, 2005: Added to the Albert Glotzer
Archive in the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line
(ETOL):
The Heroic Period of the Comintern, 1946 (written as Albert
Gates)
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde
O’Callaghan]
6 October, 2005: Added to the new Irving Howe
Internet Archive:
Reviewing
The New Course, 1946 (extended review article)
The Politics of
Incineration, 1948 (written as R. Fahan)
[Thanks to
David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
6 October, 2005: Added to the James T. Farrell
Internet Archive:
American
Literature Marches On – I, 1946
[Thanks to David
Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
6 October, 2005: Added to the Max Shachtman Internet
Archive:
Fact or Fiction on
Lenin’s Role – Reply to Davide Shub, 1950
Four Portraits
of Stalinism: III. Bertram D. Wolfe (cont’d), 1950
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
2 October, 2005:
Added to the New International Archive
(1940-1946):
Nicola Di
Bartolomeo (1946) (obituary of Italian Trotskyist leader)
The Strike
Settlements, Editorial Comment (1946)
Wartime Moscow (1946)
(Interview with an American businessman)
Wartime Murmansk,
Report by a British Seaman (1946)
Germany’s First
Post-Nazi Election, by Henry Morrison (1946)
Profits and the
Housing Crisis, by Miriam Gould (1946)
Role of the Indonesian
Leadership, by Leon Shields (1946)
Negroes and the Labor
Movement, by David Coolidge (1946)
Resolution on
Organization and Tasks of the Party, (Minority Resolution, SWP Convention
1940) (1946)
For Self-Determination
in Palestine, by Leon Shields (1946)
The Meaning of
Self-Determination, by Albert Gates (1946)
All articles from
New International, Vol.12 No.3, March 1946 are now on-line.
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
2 October, 2005:
Added to the Jean van Heijenoort
Archive in the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line
(ETOL):
The Eruption of
Bureaucratic Imperialism, 1945 (as Daniel Logan)
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde O’Callaghan]
2 October, 2005: Added to the new Henry Judd (Sherman
Stanley) Internet Archive:
France in 1946,
1946
[Thanks to David Walters & Einde
O’Callaghan]
1 October, 2005: Added to the Workers’
International News Archive:
Labour’s
Opportunity in Southern Ireland, by Tom Burns (1943)
The Bombay Plan,
by M. Naidu (1944)
Zionism – An
Outpost of Imperialism: Open Letter to Labour Party Conference, by a Group
of Palestine Socialists (1944)
Ulster in Transition
1, by Bob Armstrong (1945)
Ulster in
Transition 2, by Bob Armstrong (1945)
The ILP and the
Revolutionary Party, by Bill Hunter (1946)
[Thanks to Ted Crawford]
1 October 2005: Added to the Etienne Cabet
Archive:
Refutation of the Revue des
Deux Mondes, 1842
[Thanks to Mitch
Abidor]
1 October 2005: Added to the Denis Diderot
Archive:
On the Evident
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]
Archived “What’s New” Archives: