Biblioteca / 2000-2009
James Eaden – David Renton. The Communist Party of Great Britain since 1920.
Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2002.
220 páginas.
Contents
Introduction: the Rise and Decline of British Bolshevism
Primary sources
Secondary sources
1 – High Hopes: 1920–28
Before the Bolsheviks
Foundation
Bolshevisation
International
General Strike
Left turn
2 – The Zig-Zag Left: 1928–39
Isolation and the new line
Challenges – right and left
The line changes (1)
The line changes (2)
Cable Street
Aid Spain
Moscow Trials
3 – The Party at War: its Finest Hour?
Imperialist war: ‘what are we fighting for?’
‘Don’t you know there’s a war on?’: putting the line into practice
What sort of party?
June 1941: all change
‘The issue is clear: victory over the fascist barbarians…’
‘Everything for the Front must be the rallying call…’
The electoral truce
Conclusion
4 – Past its Peak: 1945–56
Revolutionaries and labour
The Cold War (1)
The party in crisis
The Cold War (2)
5 – The Monolith Cracks: 1956–68
The New Left
The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
Building in the unions
Moscow or Peking?
Party life in the 1960s
The parliamentary road
Conclusion
6 – Not Fade Away: from 1968 to Dissolution
Street-fighting man: students and the anti-Vietnam War protests
The British Disease: industrial militancy
Up against the law: fighting the Industrial Relations Act
White-collar workers
Labour in office
Anti-racism and anti-fascism: missing the boat
Gramsci, Eurocommunism and Marxism Today
The rise and fall of Bennism
Death throes
Dissolution and aftermath
7 – Conclusion
Bibliography