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Bolshevism, Syndicalism and the General Strike, v. 3 - Lost Internationalist World of A.A. Purcell (Paperback, New)
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Bolshevism, Syndicalism and the General Strike, v. 3 - Lost Internationalist World of A.A. Purcell (Paperback, New)
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The third and final volume of Kevin Morgan's widely acclaimed
series Bolshevism and the British Left centres around the figure of
Alf Purcell (1872-1935), who between the wars was one of the
leading personalities in the British and international labour
movement. A long-term member of the TUC General Council, Purcell
became chairman of the general strike committee in 1926 - and this
could have been his hour of glory. But when it was called off
ignominiously he experienced the obloquy of defeat. Purcell was
most famous as one of TUC 'lefts' of the 1920s. But he was also
Labour MP for both the Forest of Dean and Coventry, as well as
being the founder of a working guild in the spirit of guild
socialism, the controversial president of the International
Federation of Trade Unions and the man who moved the formation of
the British communist party. A sometime syndicalist and associate
of Tom Mann, his experiences in the militant Furnishing Trades gave
rise to the uncompromising trade-union internationalism which
features so centrally in these chapters. But with the squeezing of
his syndicalist approach, as the labour movement polarised into
Labour and communist currents, Purcell died a politically broken
figure. Morgan also deploys the life of Purcell as a biographical
lens, a way of exploring wider controversies - among them the rival
modernities of Bolshevism and Americanism; the reactions to
Bolshevism of anarchists like Emma Goldman (who called Purcell
'that damn fake'); and the roots of political tourism to the USSR
in the British labour delegations in which Purcell featured so
prominently. The volume also includes a major challenge to existing
interpretations of the general strike, which it compellingly
presents, not as the last fling of the syndicalists, but as a first
and disastrously ill-conceived imposition of social-democratic
centralism by Ernest Bevin.
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