Communists and British Society 1920-1991: People of a Special Mould

Communists and British Society 1920-1991: People of a Special Mould

The revolutionary appeal of Communism in 20th-century Britain is analyzed in this examination of why Communist Party members joined, how they participated in the party’s activities, and why, in many cases, they left the party. Archival resources, hundreds of interviews, and sociological analyses document the nature of left-wing activism in Britain from its earliest incarnations to the schisms of the 1980s. The role of Communism in British politics and society is illuminated by discussions of constructions of political authority; the role of gender, generation, and social class; and the significance of political space and mobility in recruitment.

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The Germans Absent Nationality and the Holocuast (Heritage, Society and National Identity in the European Union)

The Germans Absent Nationality and the Holocuast (Heritage, Society and National Identity in the European Union)
This examination of in-group identity issues and the essence and unique development of Germans’ national identity has direct relevance for those who seek an answer to the question – Why were the Germans of all people the perpetrators of the Holocaust? The answer lies in a ‘triangle’ of the fateful encounter of Germans and their problematic historical development, Nazi race theory, and the success of German Jewry. The author focuses on weaknesses in German identity which led to the attraction of a blood-based race theory as a national ethos – a narrative of German racial superiority which was invalidated by the very presence and prominence of Jews in German culture and society. Eliminating this ‘affront’ was an existential issue for Germans that impelled a Judenrein Europe – whether by expulsion or extermination. Such a linkage has been overlooked because scholars have concentrated on the Holocaust as a Jewish experience, not a German one. In elucidating fundamental differences between anti-Semitism and race-theory, ethnicity and nationhood, and Nazi race theory and other manifestations of European racism, Yehuda Cohen brings to the surface underlying reasons for the phenomenal attraction of Germans to race theory. Covering new ground, comparison of the pattern of German development with the path taken by other nationalities reveals German-specific motifs that weakened German national development – first and foremost the lack of an ancient national all-German heritage. This and other under-researched facets of the German experience prevented German-speaking people from forming a shared national identity. The author’s thought-provoking conclusion is that with the exception of the Nazi period, Germans have never been a nation, only an ethnicity. Only a German (Nazi) race theory provided Germans with a venerable history and vision of Oneness around which an Aryan national ethos very briefly coalesced into a genuine shared national identity. In conclusion, the author sets out how the European Union’s vision of an overarching ‘European nationality’ provides a constructive solution for Germans’ identity conflicts: it is a framework that also, ironically, supports an innate German drive to dominate the European sphere, albeit now through economic clout – a dominance never achieved by Bismarck or Hitler.

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On European Ground

On European Ground

A profound visual meditation on the trauma that scars twentieth-century Europe, Alan Cohen’s On European Ground considers the battlefields of World War I, the Nazi death camps, and the Berlin Wall, and records the distance between what we remember about these places and what we can still observe in them today. By walking these sites and photographing the very ground in which their history has dissolved, Cohen opens a space for reflection on their complex gravity and legacy.

Cohen’s images achieve a solemn beauty even as they engage history at its most topical. Pictures of trenches and bunkers at the battlefields of Somme and Verdun explore the tension between the violence of the past and the inscrutability of its remnants. Photographs from the grounds of Dachau and Auschwitz solicit a provocative dialogue between the ordinariness of these sites today and their haunting memory. They teach us, as the New Art Examiner notes, “that the living perceptual connection to the Holocaust is vanishing.” Images of the Berlin Wall show only the footprint of the barricade that once separated two hostile ideologies. They record the physical erosion and looming disappearance of the Wall while capturing its reappearance as a memorialized abstraction.

Accompanying the photographs in On European Ground are essays by Sander Gilman and Jonathan Bordo, as well as an interview with Cohen by critic Roberta Smith of the New York Times. The essays present both an introduction to and aesthetic analysis of Cohen’s work, while the interview discusses the intractable problems of history and memory that his photographs so uniquely capture.

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Deadly Farce: Harvey Matusow and the Informer System in the McCarthy Era

Deadly Farce: Harvey Matusow and the Informer System in the McCarthy Era

No issue so possessed the nation in the first half of the 1950s as alleged Communist subversion in the United States. Deadly Farce presents Harvey Matusow, a young Bronx “wise guy” who became a Communist Party member, an undercover FBI informer inside the Party, and then a leading witness for the government during the McCarthy era–until he recanted his testimony. His story illuminates a disturbing time in American history, one with renewed relevance today.

Matusow was easily the most flamboyant of the “professional” ex-Communists, a celebrity informer who considered himself “booked” by Congressional committees not just to testify, but to entertain. He testified that Communists fostered loose sex, taught politicized Mother Goose rhymes to small children, and tried to infiltrate the Boy Scouts. He also named more than 200 people as Communists and was a prosecution witness in major criminal cases.

Robert M. Lichtman and Ronald D. Cohen draw on FBI records, court transcripts, personal interviews, private papers, and other primary sources, most never before utilized, to describe the unusual role of ex-Communist informer-witnesses during the McCarthy era. The Justice Department kept several dozen political informers on the government’s payroll to testify in hundreds of deportation, sedition, and contempt of Congress cases. Some informers achieved celebrity as the result of high-profile appearances at criminal trials and before Congressional committees. But as the era continued, instances of perjury began to appear.

Harvey Matusow’s sensational recantation in 1955 gave him his biggest audience yet. It led to the dissolution of the Justice Department’s informer stable and ended the public’s infatuation with the group.

Matusow’s unrepentant and at times vaudevillian appearances before the Senate red-hunting committee investigating his recantation, followed by his prosecution for perjury–for the recantation, not his original testimony–and prison sentence, mark the climax of Deadly Farce.

Matusow’s career, during which he came to know Joe McCarthy, Roy Cohn, Pat McCarran, and Elizabeth Bentley, among many others, offers an inside, entertaining, and closely documented view of a largely untold part of McCarthy-era history. The columnist Murray Kempton described Matusow as a “truly remarkable witness in the opera bouffe sense demanded by inquisitions of the 1950s.”

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Just Marriage (New Democracy Forum)

Just Marriage (New Democracy Forum)
From the ground breaking legal decisions on gay marriage to the promotion of marriage for low-income families, the “sacred institution” of marriage has turned into a public battleground. Who should be allowed to marry and is marriage a public or private act? Should marriage be abandoned completely? Or should marriage be redefined as a civil institution that promotes sexual and racial equality?

As the fierce national debate over same-sex marriage and civil unions continues, Mary Lyndon Shanley argues that while the state should continue to play a role in regulating personal relations, the law must be fundamentally reformed if marriage is to become a more just institution. Fourteen prominent writers and thinkers respond, including Nancy F. Cott, William N. Eskridge, Jr., Amitai Etzioni, Martha Albertson Fineman, and Cass R. Sunstein.

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The Egalitarian Conscience: Essays in Honour of G. A. Cohen

The Egalitarian Conscience: Essays in Honour of G. A. Cohen

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When the Old Left Was Young: Student Radicals and America’s First Mass Student Movement, 1929-1941

When the Old Left Was Young: Student Radicals and Americas First Mass Student Movement, 1929-1941
The Depression era saw the first mass student movement in American history. The crusade, led in large part by young Communists, was both an anti-war campaign and a movement championing a broader and more egalitarian vision of the welfare state than that of the New Dealers. The movement arose from a massive political awakening on campus, caused by the economic crisis of the 1930s, the escalating international tensions, and threat of world war wrought by fascism. At its peak, in the late 1930s, the movement mobilized at least a half million collegians in annual strikes against war. Never before, and not again until the 1960s, were so many undergraduates mobilized for political protest in the United States. The movement lost nearly all its momentum in 1939, when the signing of the Hitler-Stalin pact served to discredit the student Communist leaders. Adding to the emerging portrait of political life in the 1930s, this book is the result of an extraordinary amount of research, has fascinating individual stories to tell, and offers the first comprehensive history of this student insurgency.

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Politics without a Past: The Absence of History in Postcommunist Nationalism

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Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A Political Biography, 1888-1938

Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A Political Biography, 1888-1938
This biography traces Bukharin’s rise to and fall from power, focusing particularly on the development of his theories and programmatic ideas during the critical period between Lenin’s death in 1924 and the ascendancy of Stalin in 1929.

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Just Marriage (New Democracy Forum/Boston Review)

Just Marriage (New Democracy Forum/Boston Review)

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