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American Communist History

American Communist History


The Journal of the Historians of American Communism Visit the organisation site
Published By: Routledge
Volume Number: 7
Frequency: 2 issues per year
Print ISSN: 1474-3892
Online ISSN: 1474-3906
 

Aims & Scope

American Communist History is a non-partisan, objective journal for scholarship about the history of the Communist Party in the United States and its social, political, economic and cultural impact on its members, on its opponents, and the public at large. The journal deals with the American party and with the various outside influences which have dealt with its representation, with the controversial folklore that has been engendered about it, and with the many differing views about its antecedents, and its diverse opponents on the Left and Right. While rooted in the United States, the journal welcomes contributions which are transnational or international in scope.

Despite the end of the Cold War, there is still enormous controversy about the range of Communist influence on all aspects of American life. This peer-reviewed journal of the Historians of American Communism makes available scholarship on the role of American Communism and Communists since the Party's founding at the end of the First World War. Seeking the broadest possible perspective the journal seeks submissions not only from academic historians but from other scholars, journalists, and activists who can objectively contribute to a complex, intriguing, and important history. Research articles, notes and documents, interpretive essays, and short memoirs are welcome. The journal is committed to media reviews.

We stress both the domestic sphere and the global one. American Communist History deals in detail with the various interpretations defining the role of the Communist Party, its front groups, its opponents, and Soviet agents in the United States within and on the Left and the Right. What the journal publishes is limited only by the curiosity of potential contributors and the need for quality. We wish to enhance the knowledge of issue-laden, often partisan, developments in a useful, professional, and intelligent way. American Communist History deals not only with Communism in the U.S., but with all aspects of its influence and the forces that influenced it.

American Communist History encourages authors to submit material on:

  • the validity of the Soviet archives dealing with American Communists the 'homintern'
  • Communist infiltration of the mass media in the 1930s
  • the dismissal of Jay Lovestone as an American Communist Leader
  • the role of splinter groups in the American Communist Party's history
  • the true role of the Communist Party in Hollywood
  • the splintering of the Party as a result of the 1956 Kruschev revelations about Stalin's reign of terror
  • the attitude of the Communist Party's leadership towards women
  • anti-Semitism in the American Communist Party
  • the role of 'Proletarian Literature' then and now
  • what really happened to Earl Browder
  • the Communists and black literature
  • the relationship between the Catholic church and the Communist Party
  • the impact of the FBI on the membership of the Party in the 1950s
  • the validity of the trials of the secondary leaders in the 1950s
  • the appropriate response to legislative investigation on the state and federal level
  • the fear underlying Red Scares
  • the education of 'Red-diaper babies'
  • the defection of writers from the Party in 1939 and 1956

Peer Review Policy:
All research articles published in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymized refereeing by at least two anonymous referees.

Disclaimer for scientific, technical and social science publications:
Taylor & Francis and Historians of American Communism makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the “Content”) contained in its publications. However, Taylor & Francis and Historians of American Communism and its agents and licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness or suitability for any purpose of the Content and disclaim all such representations and warranties whether express or implied to the maximum extent permitted by law. ! Any views expressed in this publication are the views of the authors and are not the views of Taylor & Francis and Historians of American Communism.

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