Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, Ca

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, Ca http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt92902225 No online items Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, ca. 1924-1946 Processed by Manuscripts Division staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé and edited by Josh Fiala. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/special/scweb/ © 2003 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Hyman Weintraub and William 831 1 Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, ca. 1924-1946 Descriptive Summary Title: Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, Date (inclusive): ca. 1924-1946 Collection number: 831 Creator: Weintraub, Hyman Extent: 26 boxes (13 linear ft.) Repository: University of California, Los Angeles. Library Special Collections. Los Angeles, California 90095-1575 Physical location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Restrictions on Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Advance notice required for access. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UCLA Library Special Collections. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright. Provenance/Source of Acquisition Collection was originally assembled by Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material (Collection 831). UCLA Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, UCLA. UCLA Catalog Record ID UCLA Catalog Record ID: 4233973 Scope and Content Collection consists of material concerning the Socialist Party in the U.S. and California, mainly during the 1930s and 40s, collected by Hyman Weintraub and William Goldberg in the course of their activities as local and national party officials. Includes local and national party publications, many of the Young People's Socialist League (YPSL), proceedings of conventions, minutes of committee meetings, press releases, membership records and dues books, financial reports and bulletins, chiefly in mimeographed form, and correspondence between Weintraub and Goldberg. Documents the struggle between the Party's radical and more conservative elements for control of the YPSL, and the heated internal debate over the Party's stand on World War II. Indexing Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog. Subjects Weintraub, Hyman--Archives. Goldberg, William--Archives. Socialist Party (U.S.). Young People's Socialist League. Socialists--United States--Archival resources. American Socialist Monthly.Box 1, folder 5. American Socialist Quarterly.Box 1, folder 5. The Appeal. Philadelphia Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Arise. New York Young People's Socialist League.Box 11, folders 5,6. California YPSL Bulletin.Box 7, folder 1. A Call against War and Fascism. Los Angeles.Box 10, folder 1. Challenge of Youth. Chicago Young People's Socialist League.Box 11, folder 7. Child Labor Study Outline. Gus Tyler.Box 9, folder 1. Clarity. New York.Box 11, folder 4. The Class Struggle. Chicago.Box 10, folder 1. Hyman Weintraub and William 831 2 Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, ca. 1924-1946 Educational Suggestions.Box 9, folder 1. Elementary Study Course, Socialist Principles and Program. Andrew J. Biemitler, Harold Kelso, and Maynard C. Krueger.Box 9, folder 1. Facts; a bulletin..... Hollywood.Box 14, folder 2. Falcon Call. New York.Box 11, folder 2. Hammer and Tongs.Box 2, folder 4. The Hillgirt Worker's Rights Amendment. John L. Levine and Charles Stewart.Box 9, folder 1. The Ideal. Bronx, New York Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Industrial Pioneer. Chicago.Box 13, folders 1,2. Industrial Pioneer. Chicago.Box 13, folders 1,2. Industrial Solidarity. Chicago.Box 13, folder 3. Industrial Solidarity. Seattle.Box 11, folder 8. Interview on Socialism.Box 9, folder 1. Journal of the.....National Convention, Socialist Party.Box 3, folders 1-3. Labor and Socialist Press Service. Chicago.Box 8, folders 2,3. The Labor Injunction. Aaron Levenstein.Box 9, folder 1. Life of Karl Marx. Gus Tyler.Box 9, folder 1. Los Angeles YPSL Bulletin.Box 7, folder 1. Manifesto and Program of American League against War and Fascism. New York.Box 10, folder 1. The March of Socialism.Box 3, folder 1. Money. Gus Tyler.Box 9, folder 1. National YPSL Bulletin.Box 7, folder 1. New Line of the YCL.Box 9, folder 1. Notes for Speakers. Chicago.Box 8, folder 4. The One Big Union Monthly. Chicago.Box 10, folder 3. An Outline of Socialist Economics.Box 9, folder 1. Outline on Socialism. Gus Tyler.Box 9, folder 1. Outline Study Course, Fundamentals of Socialism. Roger Rush.Box 9, folder 1. Proceedings.....National Convention of the Socialist Party.Box 3, folders 5-8. The Question of a Labor Party. Ernest Erber.Box 9, folder 1. Principles of Marxism. Gus Tyler.Box 9, folder 1. Reading List. Will Chosen.Box 9, folder 1. Rebel Arts. Los Angeles Young People's Socialist League.Box 14, folder 2. Rebel Arts Student Industrial Bulletin.Box 12, folder 3. Rebel Youth. California Young People Socialist League.Box 14, folder 2. Revolt. Los Angeles Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. A Short History of the British Labor Party. Walter R. Storey.Box 9, folder 1. A Short History of Labor Unions in America. Walter R. Storey.Box 9, folder 1. A Short History of Socialism in America. Walter R. Storey.Box 9, folder 1. Socialist Action. Chicago.Box 2, folder 1. Socialist Action. New York.Box 11, folder 1. Socialist Appeal. Chicago.Box 11, folder 3. Socialist Campaigner.Box 2, folder 3. Socialist Chatauqua.Box 2, folder 1. Socialist Pulse. San Francisco.Box 14, folder 2. Socialist Review.Box 1, folder 5. The Socialist Student. Los Angeles Young People's Socialist League.Box 14, folder 2. Socialist Youth. Cook County Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Hyman Weintraub and William 831 3 Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, ca. 1924-1946 Socialist Youth. Milwaukee County Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Socialist Youth International Press Service.Box 12, folder 2. Southern California Regional American Youth Congress Contact Bulletin.Box 14, folder 2. The Student Advocate. New York.Box 1, folder 2. The Student Outlook. New York.Box 7, folder 1. Three Arrows. Philadelphia Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. A Tragic Note on the United Front. Albert Goldman.Box 10, folder 1. Unemployment Insurance Outline. Irving Barshop.Box 9, folder 1. The Voice of Youth. Los Angeles Young People's Socialist League.Box 14, folder 2. Weekly News Bulletin of Los Angeles YPSL.Box 7, folder 1. Yipsel Action. Newark, New Jersey Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Yipsel Organizer. New York Young People's Socialist League.Box 5, Notebooks 1-3. The Young Rebel. Duluth, Minnesota.Box 13, folder 4. Young Socialist Action. California Young People's Socialist League.Box 7, folder 1. Young Socialist Review.Box 2, folder 2. YPSL Affairs. New York Young People's Socialist League.Box 10, folder 2. YPSL Beacon. California Young People's Socialist League.Box 14, folder 1. YPSL Industrial Bulletin.Box 12, folder 3. YPSL Student Bulletin.Box 12, folder 3. Note * Additional author entry in Special Collection public card catalog. *American League Against War and Fascism.Box 10, folder 1. *American Student Union.Box 1, folder 2. *Anti-Fascist Action.Box 10, folder 1. Barshop, Irving.Box 9, folder 1. Biemitler, Andrew J.Box 9, folder 1. Chosen, Will.Box 9, folder 1. *Clement, Travers.Box 1, folder 4.Box 3, folder 8. Erber Ernest.Box 9, folder 1. Goldberg, William.Box 1, folder 3.Box 6, folders 1-3.Box 14, folder 4. Goldman, Albert.Box 10, folder 1. Horowitz, Ben.Box 3, folder 8. *Intercollegiate League for Industrial Democracy.Box 1, folder 1. Kelso, Harold.Box 9, folder 1. *Krueger, Maynard C.Box 1, folder 4.Box 9, folder 1. Levenstein, Aaron.Box 9, folder 1. Levine, John L.Box 9, folder 1. Lewis, W. Scott.Box 14, folder 2. McDowell, Arthur.Box 1, folder 4. Rebel Arts.Box 11, folder 5.Box 14, folder 2. Rush, Roger.Box 9, folder 1. Socialist Party, Chicago.Box 8, folder 4. Socialist Party, San Francisco.Box 14, folder 2. *Socialist Youth International, Berlin.Box 12, folder 2. Stewart, Charles.Box 9, folder 1. Storey, Walter R.Box 9, folder 1. *Thomas, Norman Mattoon, 1884- .Box 1, folder 4. Tyler, Gus.Box 9, folder 1. Hyman Weintraub and William 831 4 Goldberg Collection of Socialist Party Material, ca. 1924-1946 *United Committee for Struggle Against War.Box 10, folder 1. *Willkie, Wendell Lewis, 1892-1944.Box 1, folder 4. Young People's Socialist League.Box 5, Notebooks 1-3.Box 7, folder 1.Box 9, folder 1.Box 10, folders 1,2. *Young People's Socialist League, California.Box 7, folder 1. Young People's Socialist League, Chicago.Box 11, folder 7. Young People's Socialist League, Cook County, Illinois.Box 7, folder 1. Young People's Socialist League, Los Angeles.Box 7, folder 1.Box 14, folder 2. Young People's Socialist League, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin.Box 7, folder 1. Young People's Socialist League, New Jersey.Box 7, folder 1.
Recommended publications
  • Albert Glotzer Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf1t1n989d No online items Register of the Albert Glotzer papers Processed by Dale Reed. Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563 Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] © 2010 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. Register of the Albert Glotzer 91006 1 papers Register of the Albert Glotzer papers Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California Processed by: Dale Reed Date Completed: 2010 Encoded by: Machine-readable finding aid derived from Microsoft Word and MARC record by Supriya Wronkiewicz. © 2010 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Title: Albert Glotzer papers Dates: 1919-1994 Collection Number: 91006 Creator: Glotzer, Albert, 1908-1999 Collection Size: 67 manuscript boxes, 6 envelopes (27.7 linear feet) Repository: Hoover Institution Archives Stanford, California 94305-6010 Abstract: Correspondence, writings, minutes, internal bulletins and other internal party documents, legal documents, and printed matter, relating to Leon Trotsky, the development of American Trotskyism from 1928 until the split in the Socialist Workers Party in 1940, the development of the Workers Party and its successor, the Independent Socialist League, from that time until its merger with the Socialist Party in 1958, Trotskyism abroad, the Dewey Commission hearings of 1937, legal efforts of the Independent Socialist League to secure its removal from the Attorney General's list of subversive organizations, and the political development of the Socialist Party and its successor, Social Democrats, U.S.A., after 1958. Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Languages: English Access Collection is open for research. The Hoover Institution Archives only allows access to copies of audiovisual items.
    [Show full text]
  • From Watchmen to Sentinels, Structuring : Transnational Dynamics and European Collective Action in Local Activism Structuration Magali Della Sudda
    From Watchmen to Sentinels, structuring : Transnational dynamics and European collective action in local activism structuration Magali Della Sudda To cite this version: Magali Della Sudda. From Watchmen to Sentinels, structuring : Transnational dynamics and Eu- ropean collective action in local activism structuration. Circulations et réseaux transnationaux en France et en Europe des années 1960 à nos jours, Bruno Dumons; Olivier Dard, Dec 2019, Lyon, France. halshs-03104305 HAL Id: halshs-03104305 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03104305 Submitted on 8 Jan 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivatives| 4.0 International License From Watchmen to Sentinels, structuring : Transnational dynamics and European collective action in local activism structuration Magali Della Sudda, Visiting scholar, CASBS Centre Émile Durkheim [email protected] For several years now, the role of international movements in social movements has been considerably highlighted1. This chapter offers a reflection on national and transnational dynamics by means of a local case study. In this specific configuration of a local institutional context unfavourable to the contestation of gender equality policies, a collective will invest the urban space in a spectacular and sustainable way, forging links with European protests to show its opposition and try to put this cause on the agenda.
    [Show full text]
  • 25Th Commemorations of the Genocide Against the Tutsis: "Mr
    25th Commemorations of the Genocide against the Tutsis: "Mr. President, it is time to make a statement of truth! " Mr. President, It has been 25 years since the genocide against the Tutsis has been perpetrated in Rwanda. Over the course of three months, more than one million people were exterminated by extremists coming together as the Hutu Power movement, with a massive participation of the population. The consequences of this genocide are still felt today. This past, particularly for France, does not pass. Since your election, you have sent signals of hope that the time has come to put an end to the French position characterized by silence and denial since the genocide took place. After 25 years, it is finally time to take the necessary steps in order to shed light on the truth and pursue justice. Mr. President, next April 7th your place is in Kigali, amongst the highest representatives of the international community. By the side of the survivors. France has cancelled its participation at the 20th commemoration of the genocide; your presence this year would repair this disgrace. What survivors, youth, French civil society, Rwanda, and Europe are expecting from you first and foremost is that truth be told. Even though genocide denial persists in its attempt to manipulate History, you must state the obvious : in 1994, in Rwanda, a genocide has been perpetrated against the Tutsi people. You must further explain the words spoken in Kigali in 2010 from your predecessor, former President of the French Republic Nicolas Sarkozy, who recognized that “errors of judgement and political errors have been made here and have produced absolutely dramatic consequences”.
    [Show full text]
  • "The Crisis in the Communist Party," by James Casey
    THE CRISIS in the..; COMMUNIST PARTY By James Casey Price IDc THREE ARROWS PRESS 21 East 17th Street New York City CHAPTER I THE PEOPlES FRONT AND MEl'tIBERSHIP The Communist Party has always prided itself on its «line." It has always boasted of being a "revolutionary work-class party with a Marxist­ Leninist line." Its members have been taught to believe that the party cannot be wrong at any time on any question. Nonetheless, today this Communist Party line has thrown the member­ ship of the Communist Party into a Niagara of Confusion. There are old members who insist that the line or program has not been changed. There are new members who assert just as emphatically that the line certainly has been changed and it is precisely because of this change that they have joined the party. Hence there is a clash of opinion which is steadily mov­ ing to the boiling point. Assuredly the newer members are correct in the first part of their contention that the basic program of the Communist Party has been changed. They are wrong when they hold that this change has been for the better. Today the Communist Party presents and seeks to carry out the "line" of a People's Front organization. And with its slogan of a People's Front, it has wiped out with one fell swoop, both in theory and in practice, the fundamental teachings of Karl Marx and Freidrick Engels. It, too, disowns in no lesser degree in deeds, if not yet in words, all the preachings and hopes of Nicolai Lenin, great interpretor of Marx and founder of the U.
    [Show full text]
  • The Jewish Labor Movement
    i A I .,,O 4 , -. li.` A L "O' "I .: .,me " ,. 6 *-1 g,'p1oj106 Dz Iw I.,SJ O l Op'TOomp- b PO 97. , ~~~~~~~tLhATI}Wv WP t;;:RI.: APR 20 1967 otlrIL\y ;Vw.\!nLgJlBi a e e-Vokri of Aci P)hoto C ourtL ()t1 1 AIlliL,t^lamted Cloth'iiLy Work-ers of Anicric".1 The Jewish, Labor Committee's National Trade Union Council for Human Rights is happy to join with the Nathan Chanin Cultural Foundation of the Workmen's Circle in making available this edi- tion of Gus Tyler's unique pamphlet. This study contributes to our understanding of a rich heritage-a heritage that has not only shaped our past but still has important meaning for us today. We are proud of the role that the Jewish labor movement, and since 1934 the Jewish Labor Committee, has played in strengthening American democracy-proud as Jews, proud as trade unionists, proud as peo- ple with a social vision. Whether the struggle has been against anti- Semitism, against urban and rural poverty and the degrading quality of life in our urban centers, for health care for aged citizens, or against discrimination North and South, JLC has been an important force for over 30 years in the continuing struggle for social justice and economic democracy. The social vision of the Jewish labor move- ment is our most important heritage-and maintaining the concrete relevance of that vision is the role of the NTUC. ( $ JEWISH LABOR COMMITTEEI ' tt- NATIONAL TRADE UNION COUNCIL 25 East 78th Street : New York, N-Y-.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Feasible Socialism
    ENDORSEMENT n. the occarion of the first nmtingr of the gov­ at the time of the April 2000 meetings of the erning bodier of the International Monetary World Bank and the International Moneta11 Fund 0 Fund (IMF) and the World Bank in the 21 rt (IMF) 10 Washington, DC. DSA/YDS will par­ century, we callfor the immediate stupension of the poli­ ticipate in the Mobilizatton for Global Jusucc, a cies and practices that have ca1md widerpread pover!J week of educational events and nonviolent p:o­ and mfftring among the worlds peoples, and damage to tests in Washington, which aim to promote m ·c the global environment. IJ:7e hold these inrlit11tionr respon­ equitable and democratically operated glom rible, along with the IVorldTrade Organization (WfO), stitutions in this time of sharp incguahty. I..ar~ for an unjurt global economic rystem. transnational corporations have gotten together: We issue this call in the name of global jus­ It's time for the rest of us. DSA believes Uu" tice, in solidarity with the peoples of the Global this is the appropriate follow-up to the protes o: South struggling for survival and dignity in the that derailed the \VfO meetings in Seattle face of unjust economic policies. Only when the fall. coercive powers of international financial insti­ DSA 1s joined in this mobilizanon b m tutions are rescinded shall governments be ac­ other organizations, such as Jubilee 2 • r countable first and foremost to the will of their Years is Enough, Global Exchange., and Pu people for equitable economJc development. Citizens's Global Trade Watch.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rise and Fall of the Labour League of Youth
    University of Huddersfield Repository Webb, Michelle The rise and fall of the Labour league of youth Original Citation Webb, Michelle (2007) The rise and fall of the Labour league of youth. Doctoral thesis, University of Huddersfield. This version is available at http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/id/eprint/761/ The University Repository is a digital collection of the research output of the University, available on Open Access. Copyright and Moral Rights for the items on this site are retained by the individual author and/or other copyright owners. Users may access full items free of charge; copies of full text items generally can be reproduced, displayed or performed and given to third parties in any format or medium for personal research or study, educational or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge, provided: • The authors, title and full bibliographic details is credited in any copy; • A hyperlink and/or URL is included for the original metadata page; and • The content is not changed in any way. For more information, including our policy and submission procedure, please contact the Repository Team at: [email protected]. http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/ THE RISE AND FALL OF THE LABOUR LEAGUE OF YOUTH Michelle Webb A thesis submitted to the University of Huddersfield in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Huddersfield July 2007 The Rise and Fall of the Labour League of Youth Abstract This thesis charts the rise and fall of the Labour Party’s first and most enduring youth organisation, the Labour League of Youth.
    [Show full text]
  • Resolution on Party Controversy: Adopted by the State Convention Of
    Resolution on Party Controversy Adopted by the State Convention of the Socialist Party of Ohio, Cincinnati, June 28, 1919 Per minutes published in The Ohio Socialist, whole no. 76 (July 19, 1919), pg. 2. Morning Session, June 28. L.A. Zitt elected chairman for the day. The Credentials Committee reported H.M. Hohr, Uhrichsville, entitled to a seat. Delegate seated by motion. Motion carried that the reading of the minutes of June 27th be dispensed with. Continued report of Committee on Program and Municipal Plat- form. Resolution on Party Controversy. The National Executive Committee of the party has expelled from the party the Socialist Party of Michigan and suspended the Russian, Lithuanian, Hungarian, South Slavic, and Polish Fed- erations and is threatening with expulsion the Socialist Party of Massachusetts, and the Socialist Party of New York has expelled or “reorganized” many of the branches of the locals of greater New York as well as Locals Buffalo, Rochester, and other locals. All these expulsions or suspensions have taken place because the party units in question have endorsed the Revolutionary So- cialism of the Left Wing. They represent a desperate effort on the part of the repudiated national officers of the party and their sat- ellites in similar positions in state and local organizations, to maintain their control of the party in spite of the will of the rank and file, expressed in party referendum. In order to excuse their expulsion of nearly half the member- ship of the party and their effort to sabotage the membership by 1 refusing to tabulate the vote in the national party referendums, which expressed the will of the rank and file, these discredited and repudiated leaders are carrying on a campaign of vilification against the Left Wing, even stooping so low as to act as agent provocateurs for the capitalist class by making insinuations that the Left Wing Socialists might be guilty of individual acts of ter- rorism, and have trumped up charges, which have no basis in fact, about irregularities in the conduct of the national referen- dums.
    [Show full text]
  • Écrits Sur Bergson
    Écrits sur Bergson 1890 Georges Lechalas. “Le Nombre et le temps dans leur rapport avec l’espace, à propos de Les Données immédiates. ” Annales de Philosophie Chrétienne, N.S. 23 (1890): 516-40. Print. Eng. trans. “Number and Time in Relation to Space, as Concerns Time and Free Will .” 1893 Maurice Blondel. L’action. Essai d’une critique de la vie et d’une science de la pratique . Paris: Alcan, 1893, 495. (Bibliographie de Philosophie Contemporaine) Eng. trans. Action . This item is republished in 1950, Presses Universitaires de France. 1894 Jean Weber. “Une étude réaliste de l’acte et ses conséquences morales.” Revue de métaphysique et de morale . 2.6, 1894, 331-62. Eng. trans. “A Realist Study of the Act and its Moral Consequences.” 1897 Gustave Belot. “Un Nouveau Spiritualisme.” Revue Philosophique de la France et de l’Etranger , 44.8 (August 1897): 183-99. The author sees a danger of materialism in Matter and Memory. Print. Eng. trans. “A New Spiritualism.” Victor Delbos. “Matière et mémoire, étude critique.” Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale , 5 (1897): 353- 89. Print. Eng. trans. “ Matter and Memory , A Critical Study.” Frédéric Rauh. “La Conscience du devenir.” Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale , 4 (1897): 659-81; 5 (1898): 38-60. Print. Eng. trans. “The Awareness of Becoming.” L. William Stern. “Die psychische Präsenzzeit.” Zeitschrift für Psychologie und Physiologie der Sinnesorgane 13 (1897): 326-49. The author strongly criticizes the concept of the point-like present moment. Print. Eng. trans. “The Psychological Present.” 1901 Émile Boutroux. “Letter to Xavier Léon. July 26, 1901” in Lettere a Xavier Léon e ad altri.
    [Show full text]
  • The Left in the United States and the Decline of the Socialist Party of America, 1934–1935 Jacob A
    Document généré le 1 oct. 2021 11:01 Labour Journal of Canadian Labour Studies Le Travail Revue d’Études Ouvrières Canadiennes The Left in the United States and the Decline of the Socialist Party of America, 1934–1935 Jacob A. Zumoff Volume 85, printemps 2020 Résumé de l'article Dans les premières années de la Grande Dépression, le Parti socialiste URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1070907ar américain a attiré des jeunes et des intellectuels de gauche en même temps DOI : https://doi.org/10.1353/llt.2020.0006 qu’il était confronté au défi de se distinguer du Parti démocrate de Franklin D. Roosevelt. En 1936, alors que sa direction historique de droite (la «vieille Aller au sommaire du numéro garde») quittait le Parti socialiste américain et que bon nombre des membres les plus à gauche du Parti socialiste américain avaient décampé, le parti a perdu de sa vigueur. Cet article examine les luttes internes au sein du Partie Éditeur(s) socialiste américain entre la vieille garde et les groupements «militants» de gauche et analyse la réaction des groupes à gauche du Parti socialiste Canadian Committee on Labour History américain, en particulier le Parti communiste pro-Moscou et les partisans de Trotsky et Boukharine qui ont été organisés en deux petits groupes, le Parti ISSN communiste (opposition) et le Parti des travailleurs. 0700-3862 (imprimé) 1911-4842 (numérique) Découvrir la revue Citer cet article Zumoff, J. (2020). The Left in the United States and the Decline of the Socialist Party of America, 1934–1935. Labour / Le Travail, 85, 165–198.
    [Show full text]
  • The Outlawed Party Social Democracy in Germany
    THE OUTLAWED PARTY SOCIAL DEMOCRACY IN GERMANY Brought to you by | The University of Texas at Austin Authenticated Download Date | 4/28/19 5:16 AM Brought to you by | The University of Texas at Austin Authenticated Download Date | 4/28/19 5:16 AM THE OUTLAWED PARTY SOCIAL DEMOCRACY IN GERMANY, 18 7 8- 1 8 9 0 VERNON L . LIDTKE PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS 196 6 Brought to you by | The University of Texas at Austin Authenticated Download Date | 4/28/19 5:16 AM Copyright © i960 by Princeton University Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 66-14311 Publication of this book has been aided by the Whitney Darrow Publication Reserve Fund of Princeton University Press. The initials at the beginning of each chapter are adaptations from Feder und Stichel by Zapf and Rosenberger. Printed in the United States of America by Vail-Ballou Press, Inc., Binghamton, New York Brought to you by | The University of Texas at Austin Authenticated Download Date | 4/28/19 5:16 AM CONTENTS PREFACE V I. THE EMERGENCE AND EARLY ORIENTATION OF WORKING-CLASS POLITICAL ACTION 3 The German Social and Political Context 3 Ferdinand Lassalle and the Socialist Movement: An Ambiguous Heritage 18 Political and Social Democracy in the Eisenacher Tradition: The "People's State" 27 Principles and Tactics: Parliamentarism as an Issue of Socialist Politics 32 II. THE MATURATION OF THE SOCIALIST MOVE­ MENT IN THE EIGHTEEN-SEVENTIES 39 The Quest for Revolutionary Identity and Organizational Unity 40 The Gotha Program as a Synthesis of Traditional Social Democratic Ideas 43 Unity between Social Democratic Theory and Practice in Politics 52 The Quest for Certainty in Economic Thought 59 On the Eve of Catastrophe: Social Democrats and German Society 66 III.
    [Show full text]
  • Why Are We in Grenada? Michael Harrington on U.S
    Why Are We In Grenada? Michael Harrington on U.S. Foreign Policy - Convention Reports by Barbara Ehrenreich, Jim Shoch and Maxine PhilliPs STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, AND ClRCULATION Sale! (Act of Aul!Usl 12. 1970: Sectinn 3611.'i. Title 39. Unitdl Slalt'' Code) l. TnleofPublica1n1-0EMOCRATICLEFT 2. Dale ofFihnir. November 29. 1983 3. Frcqut>1wv of lssU<.. Monthlv, except Jul)·. Aui..'Usl and Sale! Ocl'lber 4. [.ocaL10n of lmu\\n nffkt' of pubficatKm: ll.'i.1 Broadway. Room 801. New York -.. Y 1000.'l. 5. Location of Lilt.> ht.-adquarters or l?l'ot'ral busiot'M of­ fices nf th<! Publisht-r 115.1 Broadwav. Room Ml. Nl'W Sale! York. N. Y Hl003. 6. Name• and addrl'sM's of Publishers. Editor and Man­ ~l(l n !( Editor: Dcmocratit' Socialists of Am.,rica. Mi.:hae-1 Harrington. Maxin.- Phillips. all of 8.5.1 Broadwa~·. Ne"' / KRAZY KARL'S RED HOT LIT SALE! York. N Y 10003. 7. Owner; O..mo<Tat1<· Soc 1~l i sts of Am1•nca. l\S.1 Rrnad­ wav, New Yolii. N Y. 10003. ~~- I 8. Known bundholck·rs. mortJ,!ffi;!e<'S. and other ......'tint)' Don't miss these holiday bargains! Krazy Karl has to make room for holder. nwnmg or holdm)! l J>l'rrent or mor<' of IOlaJ amount• •fhondo; mort)?a)?t'S or ntht'r St'('UJ1tit-s: :"<lflt'. 1984 inventory. Prices have been slashed. Stock up now. 9. The purpnst'. function and nonprofit slat"" ulf~hi, 11r­ i:armatii111 and tilt- <'Xt'mpt status lur Ft-dt'ral lllrnfllt' tax purposes ha\" lll>t <·han1tt'd durini: prt'C<"<linl? l'.? month~ .
    [Show full text]