Labour Monthly was a magazine associated with the Communist Party of Great Britain. It was not technically published by the Party, and, particularly in its later period, it carried articles by left-wing trade unionists from outside the Party. It was published from June 1921 to March 1981, and from its inception until his death in 1974 it was edited by leading Party member and theoretician Rajani Palme Dutt, with only a few months absence in 1922 where he was deputised by another leading party figure, Tom Wintringham.[1][2] The several-page editorial, entitled Notes of the Month, represented official CPGB policy. The intention was to try to keep open a potential channel of communication to Party members in the event of the CPGB being banned at any point.

Editors

1921: R. Palme Dutt[3]
1922: Tom Wintringham (acting)
1922: R. Palme Dutt[3]
1975: Andrew Rothstein (acting)[3]
1976: Pat Sloan[3]
1979: Harry Smith
1981: Andrew Rothstein

Authors published

  • "Proletarian Poetry" (1918), Labour Monthly, Vol. IV, No. 5-6, May–June 1923
  • "The Criticism of Proletarian Art" (from Kritika proletarskogo iskusstva, 1918) Labour Monthly, Vol. V, No. 6, December 1923
  • "Religion, Art and Marxism", Labour Monthly, Vol. VI, No. 8, August 1924
"The Labour Struggle in Japan", part 1, Labour Monthly Vol. 1 August 1921 No. 2
"The Labour Struggle in Japan", part 2, Labour Monthly Vol. 1 September 1921 No. 3

References

  1. Playford, J. D. (1963). "Labour Monthly (London), 1921-1962". Labour History. Australian Society for the Study of Labour History (5): 57–59. doi:10.2307/27507733. JSTOR 27507733.
  2. Hugh Purcell & Phyll Smith, Last English Revolutionary, 2012 LSE/Sussex Academic Press.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Vernon, Hilda (February 1979). "Pat Sloan". Labour Monthly: 60.
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