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The Class Struggle was a bi-monthly Marxist theoretical magazine published in New York City by the Socialist Publication Society. The SPS also published a series of pamphlets, mostly reprints from the magazine during the short period of its existence. Among the initial editors of the publication were Ludwig Lore, Marxist theoreticians Louis B. Boudin and Louis C. Fraina, the former of whom left the publication in 1918. In the third and final year of the periodical, The Class Struggle emerged as one of the primary English-language voices of the left wing factions within the American Socialist Party and its final issue was published in 1919 by the nascent Communist Labor Party of America.
History
= The Left Wing movement
=Even prior to the establishment of the Socialist Party of America (SPA) in the summer of 1901, there had been a more or less conscious left wing movement, which looked with disdain upon advocacy of a "minimum program" of ameliorative reform, instead arguing for the wholesale revolutionary transformation of politics and society. World War I intensified the feelings of alienation of the left wing from the moderate leadership of the SPA and their almost exclusive concentration upon electoral politics. The Left saw the failure of the parliamentary Socialists of Europe to avert the catastrophe of war as indicative of what one historian has aptly characterized as the "fatal dilution of revolutionary principles by the party." The radicals, in ever more strident terms, objected to the "parliamentary cretinism" and "sausage socialism" of the moderate wing of the socialist movement, gradually coming to view its existence as an impediment on the achievement of socialist change.
Further impetus to the Left Wing was provided by the victory of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers Party, headed by V.I. Lenin in November 1917. The Bolshevik triumph seemed to validate the perspective of the radicals that socialist change would come through revolutionary upheaval rather than through piecemeal parliamentary reform. Parallel revolutionary efforts in Germany, Finland, and Hungary seemed to signal a new historical moment to the often young and always enthusiastic Left Wing movement. This movement sought to organize itself and to give voice to its ideas via the printed word. The magazine The Class Struggle, established late in the spring of 1917, was a particularly important vehicle for this emerging Left Wing.
= Earlier American left wing theoretical journals
=The Class Struggle was by no means the first radical theoretical magazine in America. Two publications stood out as key influences during the first two decades of the 20th Century β Charles H. Kerr's International Socialist Review, published in Chicago from 1900 to 1918, and The New Review, a New York magazine published from 1913 to 1916 to which future Class Struggle editor Louis C. Fraina was a key contributor.
Historian Theodore Draper credits a successor to The New Review, called The New International, as the newspaper which played the "historic role as the first propaganda organ" of the proto-Communist Left Wing Section. Ten issues of the four-page newspaper were produced in New York, also edited by Louis Fraina and financed in large part by radical Dutch engineer S.J. Rutgers. No more than 1,000 copies were produced of each issue and the practical influence of the publication was ultimately limited. While not properly a theoretical journal itself, The New International did clearly play a transitional role linking the earlier publications of the Left Wing with The Class Struggle.
= Establishment of the publication
=Early in 1917, leading Russian-Jewish revolutionary socialist Leon Trotsky arrived in New York. He was immediately drawn into a meeting on January 14, 1917 of about 20 Left Wing Socialists at the home of German-American radical Ludwig Lore. Also attending the gathering were several other top Γ©migrΓ©s from the Russian empire, including feminist Alexandra Kollontay, theoretician Nikolai Bukharin, and orator V. Volodarsky. Joining them were Sen Katayama, an exile from Japan, engineer S.J. Rutgers, and leading American radicals Louis B. Boudin, Louis C. Fraina, and John D. Williams of the 1Socialist Propaganda Society1 of Boston. This meeting, called to discuss "a program of action for Socialists of the Left," debated whether American radicals should separate themselves from the Socialist Party of America or stay within the organization. While Bukharin called for a prompt split, Trotsky sought the Left Wing to remain in the party and won the debate on the question.
The January 14 meeting formed a subcommittee to construct a definite proposal for the next session of the group. This committee came back with a proposal for the establishment of a bimonthly theoretical journal to further advance the views of the Zimmerwald Left in America. The Class Struggle would ultimately emerge as the publication envisioned by this committee established by New York City radicals.
The Class Struggle was produced by a publishing holding company known as the Socialist Publication Society. Physical production of the magazine took place at the 15 Spruce Street address of the New Yorker Volkszeitung, the German-language socialist daily newspaper then edited by Ludwig Lore.
= Demise of the publication
=At a special meeting of the Socialist Publication Society in October 1919, it was decided to transfer ownership of The Class Struggle, along with all pamphlets and books published during its existence to the Communist Labor Party, the organization which Ludwig Lore and a majority of the German Socialist Federation supported. With co-editor Fraina gone to the rival Communist Party of America and nominal co-editor Eugene V. Debs in the penitentiary for his anti-war speech delivered at Canton, Ohio, a reshuffling of the editorial board was in order. Joining Lore were the two other members of the CLP's editorial committee β Jack Carney, editor of the Duluth, Minnesota CLP weekly, Truth, and Russian Federation member Gregory Weinstein, formerly the editor of the Russian-language weekly, Novyi Mir.
This shift of formal ownership proved to be ill-advised and fatal to the publication, however, as in November 1919 a series of raids began against the nascent American communist movement, culminating in the nationwide "Palmer Raids" of January 2/3, 1920. The Communist Labor Party was driven underground in the aftermath, its membership decimated, its sources of income disconnected, its legal expenses exponentially increased. The November 1919 issue of The Class Struggle, proved to be the magazine's last.
Throughout the course of its existence, a total of 13 issues of The Class Struggle were produced, along with approximately a dozen pamphlets reissuing selected articles from its pages. The Class Struggle was reissued in book form in three bound volumes by the Greenwood Reprint Company in 1968, assuring its availability to research libraries around the world. Every issue of "The Class Struggle", digitized by the Riazanov Library digital archive project, can also be viewed and downloaded as a pdf file from The Class Struggle page at the Marxists Internet Archive.
References
SPS pamphlets
The Class struggle and socialism: a statement of the problems confronting the Socialist movement to-day, and a call to action New York: Socialist Publication Society, 1917
Radek and Ransome on Russia: being Rathur Ransome's "Open letter to America" by Arthur Ransome and Karl Radek Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
A letter to American workingmen: from the Socialist Soviet Republic of Russia by Vladimir Lenin Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
An open letter to American liberals: with a note on recent documents by Santeri Nuorteva Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
J'Accuse: An Address in Court by Friedrich Adler Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
The socialist attitude on the war by Louis Fraina Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
The old order in Europe and the new order in Russia by Morgan Philips Price Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
The Soviet, the Terror and Intervention by Morgan Philips Price Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
One year of revolution: celebrating the first anniversary of the founding of the Russian Soviet Republic ... November 7, 1918 Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1918
Education and art in Soviet Russia: in the light of official decrees and documents Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1919
The crisis in the German social-democracy: (the "Junius" pamphlet) Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1919
A New Letter to the Workers of Europe and America by Vladimir Lenin Brooklyn: Socialist Publication Society, 1919
Chronological listing of content
Vol. 1, No. 1 (MayβJune 1917)
Editors, "The Task Before Us," pp. 1β14. β reprinted as a pamphlet, see above
N. Bukharin, "The Russian Revolution and Its Significance," pp. 14β21.
Louis C. Fraina, "The War and America," pp. 22β33.
Friedrich Adler, "Majority Limitations and Minority Rights," pp. 33β41.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Emergency National Convention of the Socialist Party," pp. 41β50.
William Bohn, "An Educational Experiment," pp. 50β56.
James Peter Warbasse, "The Red Cross and War," pp. 57β62.
Anton Pannekoek, "After the War Ends," pp. 62β69.
Ludwig Lore, "Reform in Germany?" pp. 69β80.
J. Koettgen, "On the Road to Reaction," pp. 80β87.
Ludwig Lore, "Conscription," pp. 88β90.
Louis B. Boudin, "America in the War β The Reason Why," pp. 90β94.
Louis B. Boudin, "America in the War β War Aims," pp. 94β96.
Louis C. Fraina, "The First Victims of War," pp. 96β98.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Autocrat in the White House," pp. 98β99.
Louis B. Boudin, "The National Convention and Its War Resolutions," pp. 100β101.
Louis B. Boudin, "A Deserved Rebuke," pp. 101β103.
Ludwig Lore, "Kaiser Socialists," pp. 103β104.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Mission That Failed," pp. 104β106.
"Documents for Future Socialist History," pp. 106β112.
Vol. 1, No. 2 (JulyβAugust 1917)
Ludwig Lore, "To Make the World Safe for Democracy," pp. 1β8.
Austin Lewis, "War and Public Opinion," pp. 9β16.
Louis B. Boudin, "Socialist Policy in Peace and War," pp. 16β35.
Joseph A. Whitehorn, "A War Legislature," pp. 36β46.
Eric Niel, "Political Majorities and Industrial Minorities," pp. 46β59.
Robert Rives LaMonte, "Socialists and War," pp. 59β75.
Louis C. Fraina, "Socialists and War," pp. 75β99. β Reprinted as a pamphlet, see above
W., "Philipp Scheidemann: A Pen Picture," pp. 100β101.
Friedrich Adler, "J'accuse! Friedrich Adler's Address in Court [part 1]," pp. 102β114. β Reprinted as a pamphlet, see above
Louis B. Boudin, "Peace with Victory," pp. 115β116.
Louis B. Boudin, "Lost β A Peace Demand," pp. 117β118.
Louis B. Boudin, "Automobile Patriots," pp. 118β119.
Louis B. Boudin, "Mr. Wilson and Child Labor," pp. 119β120.
Louis C. Fraina, "The War and American Unionism," pp. 120β123.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Russian Revolution and the War," pp. 123β126.
Ludwig Lore, "On the Road to a New International," pp. 126β129.
Ludwig Lore, "Friedrich Adler," pp. 129β132.
Ludwig Lore, "The Socialist Party and Stockholm," pp. 132β135.
Ludwig Lore, "Spargo & Co.," pp. 135β138.
Louis C. Fraina, "The Attitude of Lenin," pp. 138β141.
"Documents for Future Socialist History," pp. 142β152.
Vol. 1, no. 3 (SeptemberβOctober 1917)
Austin Lewis, "The New Labor Movement of the West," pp. 1β10.
Louis B. Boudin, "Socialist Terms of Peace," pp. 11β39.
Morris Kolchin, "The Russian Revolution and its Problems," pp. 40β56.
Louis C. Fraina, "Labor and Democracy," pp. 57β62.
Friedrich Adler, "J'accuse! Friedrich Adler's Address in Court [part 2]," pp. 102β114.
Sen Katayama, Recent Development of Capitalism in Japan," pp. 72-82.
C.D., "La Vie des Mots," pp. 83β84.
Franz Mehring, "Our Old Masters and Their Modern Substitutes," pp. 85β93.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Pope's Proposal and Wilson's Reply," pp. 94β97.
Louis B. Boudin, "People's Council and the National Alliance," pp. 97β99.
Ludwig Lore, "Meyer London," pp. 100β101.
Ludwig Lore, "Tom Mooney and Alexander Berkman," pp. 101β103.
Ludwig Lore, "A Savior of His Country," pp. 103β105.
Editors, "Germany Stands Pat," pp. 105β107.
S. J. Rutgers, "Boudin's Policy in Peace and War," pp. 108β111.
Vol. 1, no. 4 (NovemberβDecember 1917)
Louis C. Fraina, "The IWW Trial," pp. 1β5.
Leon Trotsky, "Pacifism in the Service of Imperialism," pp. 6β14.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Passing of the Nation," pp. 15β34.
Karl Kautsky, "The Russian Revolution," pp. 35β39.
Ludwig Lore, "Our Obedient Congress," pp. 40β48.
N. Lenin, "Political Parties in Russia," pp. 49β63.
S.J. Rutgers, "Imperialism and the New Middle Class," pp. 64β71.
Edward Dryden, "The Case of Fraina," pp. 72β79.
Lionel Petersen, "Stockholm," pp. 80β84.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Tragedy of the Russian Revolution," pp. 85β90.
Marius, "The Task of the Constituent Assembly," pp. 91β99.
Ludwig Lore, "The New York Mayorality Campaign," pp. 100β106.
Louis B. Boudin, "Act, Not Withdraw," pp. 106β109.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Italian Debacle," pp. 109β113.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Neue Zeit β An Obituary," pp. 113β116.
Louis C. Fraina, "Making Haste Slowly," pp. 116β120.
Vol. 2, no. 1 (JanuaryβFebruary 1918)
Leon Trotsky, "A Letter from Leon Trotsky to Ex-Minister Jules Guesde," pp. 1β8.
Adolph Germer, "Samuel Gompers," pp. 9β15.
Rosa Luxemburg, "Peace and the International," pp. 16β28.
Louis C. Fraina, "The Proletarian Revolution in Russia," pp. 29β67.
Ludwig Lore, "Armistice on All Fronts," pp. 68β72.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Common Enemy," pp. 73β95.
Fabian, "Disarmament," pp. 96β100.
Louis Brandt, "Bolsheviki β The Masters of the Revolution," pp. 101β106.
V. Algassov, "Plekhanov and Breshkovskaya," pp. 107β109.
"Documents for Future Socialist History," pp. 110β112.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Peace Negotiations," pp. 113β117.
Louis B. Boudin, "Eleventh Hour Conversions," pp. 117β120.
Editors, "Who Speaks?" pp. 120β123.
Ludwig Lore, "Our National Executive Committee," pp. 123β125.
Louis B. Boudin, "St. Louis and After," pp. 126β128.
Vol. 2, no. 2 (MarchβApril 1918)
Florence Kelley, "Changing Labor Conditions in Wartime," pp. 129β142.
W.D., "The Land Question in the Russian Revolution," pp. 143β160.
John J. Kallen, "Forming a War Psychosis," pp. 161β170.
Santeri Nuorteva, "The Future of the Russian Revolution," pp. 171β185.
Louis B. Boudin, "The Tragedy of the Russian Revolution: Second Act," pp. 186β192.
Karl Liebknecht, "Self-Determination of Nations and Self-Defense," pp. 193β203.
Ludwig Lore, "Germany, the Liberator," pp. 204β212.
Leon Trotsky, "The State in Russia β Old and New," pp. 213β221.
Louis B. Boudin, "The New Danger: Peace by Negotiation," pp. 222β228.
Louis B. Boudin, "Recall Berger," pp. 229β232.
Louis B. Boudin, "Strategy and Conscience," pp. 233β236.
Karl Kautsky, "The Bolsheviki Rising," pp. 237β241.
The Survey: "The British Miners and the War: An Interview with Robert Smillie," pp. 241β248.
Vol. 2, no. 3 (MayβJune 1918)
Karl Marx, "The Divine Right of the Hohenzollern," Introduction by Franz Mehring, pp. 249β259.
Ludwig Lore, "Karl Marx," pp. 260β270.
Herman Schlueter, "Karl Marx and the International," pp. 271β288.
James Oneal, "The New 'Americanism,'" pp. 289β295.
Hans Block, "Pontius Pilate Scheidemann," pp. 296β297.
Santeri Nuorteva, "The Rape of Finland's Labor Republic," pp. 298β304.
N. Lenin, "The 'Disarmament' Cry," pp. 305β316.
A.V. Lunacharsky, "Appeal by People's Commissary of Education," pp. 317β322.
John J. Kallen, "The Biology of Peace and War," pp. 323β333.
Louis B. Boudin, "A War Anniversary," pp. 334β338.
Louis B. Boudin, "St. Louis β One Year After," pp. 338β341.
Ludwig Lore, "Freedom of Thought and Speech," pp. 341β345.
Louis B. Boudin, "Foch and Siberia: A Contrast," pp. 345β351.
Louis B. Boudin, "War Maps and 'Liberalism,'" pp. 351β354.
Ludwig Lore, "Toward the Revolution," pp. 354β357.
"Documents for Future Socialist History," pp. 358β375.
Vol. 2, no. 4 (SeptemberβOctober 1918)
Ludwig Lore, "The IWW Trial," pp. 377β383.
Maxim Litvinov, "Soviet Russia Speaks to Britain," pp. 384β387.
Sen Katayama, "Armed Peace on the Pacific," pp. 388β404.
N. Lenin, "The Chief Task of Our Day," pp. 405β409.
Louis C. Fraina, "Laborism and Socialism," pp. 410β431.
Santeri Nuorteva, "An Open Letter to American Liberals," pp. 432β454. βReprinted as a pamphlet
"Reconstruction in Russia," pp. 455β491.
Louis C. Fraina, "The Prospects of Peace," pp. 492β499.
Ludwig Lore, "Spargo, Simons and Private Kopelin," pp. 500β504.
Louis C. Fraina, "The AF of L Labor Mission," pp. 504β507.
Ludwig Lore, "Progress Backward," pp. 507β512.
Louis C. Fraina, "Imperialism in Action," pp. 512β520.
Special Publication: One Year of Revolution: Celebrating the First Anniversary of the Founding of the Russian Revolution.
Vol. 2, no. 5 (December 1918)
N. Lenin, "A Letter to American Workingmen," pp. 521β533. β reprinted as a pamphlet, see above
William J. Fielding, "Bridging the Gap of State Socialism," pp. 534β541.
Leon Trotsky, "In British Captivity," pp. 542β555.
Z. HΓΆglund, "A Finnish Document," pp. 556β559.
Victor Adler, "The Awakening of Austria," pp. 560β572.
Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Paul Lafargue, F. Lessner, "A Letter to the Polish Socialists," pp. 573β575.
Ludwig Lore, "New Germany," pp. 576β591.
Maxim Gorki, "In the Torrent of the Revolution," pp. 592β599.
Sen Katayama, "A Japanese Interpretation of the Recent Food Riots," pp. 600β606.
Maurice Blumlein, "Economic and Menshevik Determinism," pp. 607β616.
Ludwig Lore, "The Bubble Has Burst," pp. 617β619.
Ludwig Lore, "The Elections," pp. 619β622.
Ludwig Lore, "Eugene V. Debs," pp. 622β624.
Ludwig Lore, "The Red Flag," pp. 625β627.
Ludwig Lore, "One Measure for All," pp. 628β630.
Ludwig Lore, "'Our' Peace Delegates," pp. 630β632.
Ludwig Lore, "Victor Adler," pp. 632β633.
"Documents," pp. 634β640.
Vol. 3, no. 1 (February 1919)
Eugene V. Debs, "The Day of the People," pp. 1β4.
Nikolai Lenin, "The State and Revolution," pp. 5β22.
Karl Island, "Lenin versus Wilson," pp. 23-26.
Louis C. Fraina, "Problems of American Socialism," pp. 26β47.
Ludwig Lore, "Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg," pp. 47β64.
A. Dreifuss, "The Labor Party," pp. 64β67.
Franz Mehring, "Karl Marx," pp. 68β75.
Maurice Blumlein, "Economic and Menshevik Determinism," pp. 76β87.
Leon Trotsky, "The Principles of Democracy and Proletarian Dictatorship," pp. 88β91.
Karl Kautsky, "The National Constituent Assembly," pp. 91β94.
Ludwig Lore, "'A World Safe for Democracy,'" pp. 95β97.
Louis C. Fraina, "The Crime of Crimes," pp. 97β101.
Louis C. Fraina, "Mexico and American Imperialism," pp. 101β105.
Ludwig Lore, "Franz Mehring," pp. 106β109.
Ludwig Lore, "The Constitutional National Assembly," pp. 109β110.
Edward Lindgren, "What is the 'Left Wing' Movement and Its Purpose?" pp. 111β114.
"The Communist Propaganda League of Chicago," pp. 114β115.
"Documents," pp. 116β127.
Vol. 3, no. 2 (May 1919)
Ludwig Lore, "The First of May, 1919," pp. 129β131.
N. Bukharin, "Church and School in the Soviet Republic," pp. 131β139.
August Strindberg, "What the Under-Class Answers to the Most Impressive Phrases of the Upper Class," pp. 139β144.
M. Philips Price, "The Truth About the Allied Intervention in Russia," pp. 145β154.
Ludwig Lore, "Berne β A Post-Mortem Conference," pp. 155β162.
Maxim Gorky, "Russian Tale," pp. 162β165.
Sen Katayama, "Japan and China," pp. 165β172.
Nikolai Lenin, " Can the Exploited and Exploiter be Equals?" pp. 172β178.
Maurice Sugar, "Socialism and the League of Nations," pp. 178β187.
Charles Rappaport, "The Logic of Insanity," pp. 187β192.
Franz Mehring, "An Unusual Friendship," pp. 192β200.
AndrΓ© A. Courland, "Bankruptcy or Revolution β Which?" pp. 200β208.
"Manifesto and Program of the 'Left Wing' Section, Socialist Party, Local Greater New York," pp. 209β216.
Ludwig Lore, "Communism in Hungary," pp. 217β225.
Louis C. Fraina, "The Left Wing," pp. 225β229.
Ludwig Lore, "Eugene V. Debs, a Revolutionist," pp. 229β231.
Ludwig Lore, "The Representative of a Free Working Class," pp. 231β232.
Louis C. Fraina, "Mass Strikes," pp. 233β235.
Ludwig Lore, "Archangel, A Hopeful Sign," pp. 235β236.
"Documents," pp. 237β255.
Vol. 3, no. 4 (August 1919)
Ludwig Lore, "Left or Right?" pp. 257β264.
Rosa Luxemburg, "What is Bolshevism?" pp. 265β268.
Max Bedacht, "Radicalism in California," pp. 268β271.
Karl Radek, "The Development of Socialism from Science into Action," pp. 272β295.
S.J. Rutgers, "Greetings from Soviet Russia," pp. 295β300.
August Stringberg, "Autumn Slush," pp. 300β304.
Max Eastman, "The SLP," pp. 304β306.
A.S. Sachs, "Russia and Germany," pp. 306β318.
"Documents," pp. 319β333.
Ludwig Lore, "The Lusk Fishing Expedition," pp. 334β336.
S.D., "The Railroad Situation," pp. 336β339.
Editors: "The Negro Problem β A Labor Problem," pp. 339β341.
Editors: "Socialist Germany and the Peace," pp. 341β344.
Ludwig Lore, "The First Victim of the League of Nations," pp. 344β346.
Ludwig Lore, "The National Convention," pp. 346β348.
N. Lenin, "On the Unhappy Peace," pp. 348β352.
Vol. 3, no. 3 (November 1919)
Published by the Communist Labor Party
Communist Labor Party: "Hands Off Russia! A Call to the American Working Class," pp. 354β355.
Ludwig Lore, "Two Years of Soviet Russia," pp. 355β365.
Leon Trotsky, "Work, Discipline, and Order to Save the Socialist Soviet Republic," pp. 366β382.
A.S. Sachs, "The Invincible Power of the Russian Revolution," pp. 382β386.
Rosa Luxemburg, "Oh! How German is this Revolution!" pp. 386β389.
William Bross Lloyd, "Convention Impressions," pp. 389β394.
Karl Marx, "Concerning the Jewish Question," pp. 395β406.
A. Bilan, "The Twilight of Leadership," pp. 406β408.
N. Lenin, "The Military Program of the Proletarian Revolution," pp. 409β413.
Clara Zetkin, "Rosa Luxemburg β Her Fight Against the German Betrayers of International Socialism," pp. 414β424.
"Documents," pp. 425β436.
Ludwig Lore, "The Communist Labor Party," pp. 438β443.
M.B., "The Dynamic Class Struggle," pp. 443β445.
Ludwig Lore, "One Year German Revolution," pp. 445β448.
See also
Left Wing Section
Socialist Party of America
Communist Party of America