Biblioteca / 1990-1999
Eric Homberger, John Biggart, eds. John Reed and the Russian Revolution. Uncollected Articles, Letters and Speeches on Russia, 1917–1920.
Londres: Macmillan, 1992.
340 páginas.
Contents
Introduction
Part I
1917
Chronology: John Reed in 1917
1 – The Fall of the Russian Bastille
2 – Russia
3 – The Russian Peace [written with Louise Bryant]
4 – A Letter from John Reed
5 – Letter to Sally Robinson
6 – Letter to Boardman Robinson
7 – A Visit to the Russian Army
8 – Letter to Boardman Robinson
9 – Red Russia: Kerensky, I
10 – John Reed Cables the Call News of the Bolshevik Revolt
11 – Red Russia: The Triumph of the Bolsheviki
12 – Red Russia: Kerensky, II
Part II
1918
Chronology: John Reed in 1918
13 – The Origins of Workers’ Control in Russia
14 – Two Manuscripts on the Revolution
15 – Bolsheviki Foes of All Imperialism
16 – A Lecture on Conditions in Russia
17 – A Message to Our Readers from John Reed Who Has Just Returned from Petrograd
18 – ‘Foreign Affairs’
19 – Revolutionary Controversies
20 – The Case for the Bolsheviki
21 – ‘Kerensky is Coming!’
22 – Memorandum to Colonel House on Intervention in Russia
23 – Address to the Jacob Schwartz Memorial Meeting
24 – Letter to Upton Sinclair
25 – The Second Day
26 – The Constituent Assembly in Russia
27 – They Are Still There!
Part III
1919-20
Chronology: John Reed in 1919-20
28 – How Soviet Russia Conquered Imperial Germany
29 – The Latest from Russia
30 – Doctor Rakovsky
31 – Prinkipo and After
32 – Bolshevism: What It Is Not
33 – Notebook Entries on an Interview with Trotsky
34 – The Bolsheviks in 1919: Notebook Entries
35 – Soviet Russia Now