Since the Second World War, Marxism in Britain has declined
almost to the point of oblivion. The Communist Party of Great
Britain had more than 50,000 members in the early 1940s, but less
than 5,000 when it disbanded in 1991. Dissenting and Trotskyist
organisations experienced a very similar decline, although there
has been a late flowering of Marxism in Scotland.
Based on the Communist Party archives at Manchester, this text
examines the decline over the last sixty years. Dealing with the
impact of the Cold War upon British Marxism, the book looks at how
international events such as the Soviet invasions of Hungary and
Czechslovakia affected the Communist Party of Great Britain. The
issues of Marxism and Britain s withdrawal from the Empire are also
addressed, as are the Marxist influence upon British industrial
relations and its involvement in the feminist movement.
Focusing on the current debate in British Marxist history over
the influence of Moscow and Stalinism on the Communist Party, Keith
Laybourn explores the ways in which this issue, which divides
historians, undermined Marxism in Britain.
General
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