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A dreamer's paradise lost: Louis C. Fraina, Lewis Corey (1892 - 1953) and the decline of radicalism in the United States, 1910 - 1950
In: Revolutionary studies
History and the new left: Madison, Wisconsin, 1950 - 1970
In: Critical perspectives on the past
Teach for Climate Justice: A Vision for Transforming Education
In: Radical teacher: a socialist, feminist and anti-racist journal on the theory and practice of teaching, Band 128
ISSN: 1941-0832
Review of Tom Roderick. Teach for Climate Justice: A Vision for Transforming Education.
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Palestine, Oh, Palestine!
In: Monthly review: an independent socialist magazine, S. 54-57
In this review of Linda Dittmar's Tracing Homelands, Paul Buhle writes, "History may yet hold hope when hope is otherwise lacking when we reject the stalemate that only leads to despair."
Mike Richardson, Tremors of Discontent: My Life in Print 1970-1988 (Bristol: Bristol Radical History Group, 2021)
In: Labour: journal of Canadian labour studies = Le travail : revue d'études ouvrières Canadiennes, Band 89, S. 337-339
ISSN: 1911-4842
The Forgotten Anarchists
In: Diplomatic history, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 849-851
ISSN: 1467-7709
Able to Lead: Disablement, Radicalism and the Political Life of E.T. Kingsley: Ravi Malhotra and Benjamin Isitt, (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2021), 374 pp., $58.47
In: Socialism and democracy: the bulletin of the Research Group on Socialism and Democracy, Band 35, Heft 2-3, S. 430-432
ISSN: 1745-2635
The Left and the Class Struggle
In: Monthly Review, S. 57-54
ISSN: 0027-0520
Both Toni Gilpin's The Long Deep Grudge and Michael Goldfield's The Southern Key offer ample evidence that the grand era of U.S. labor history scholarship is not yet past. The Long Deep Grudge is in equal parts labor history and family reminiscence as Gilpin seeks the fuller story of her father, who played a leadership role in the United Auto Workers union. The Southern Key is in many ways a study of a different variety, but very much of a similarly militant kind. Goldfield, a labor activist veteran himself, draws the big picture of what he sees as the central failure of the U.S. left: the failure to organize the South.