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Steeped in conspiracy, scandal and socialism - the disappearance of
radical icon Victor Grayson is a puzzle that's never been solved. A
firebrand and Labour politician who rose to prominence in the early
twentieth century, Grayson was idolised by hundreds of thousands of
Britons but despised by the establishment. After a tumultuous life,
he walked out of his London apartment in September 1920 and was
never seen again. After a century, new documents have come to
light. Fragments of an unpublished autobiography, letters to his
lovers (both men and women), leading political and literary figures
including H.G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw, and testimonies from
members of the Labour elite such as Clement Attlee have revealed
the real Victor Grayson. New research has uncovered the true events
leading up to his disappearance and suggests that he was actually
blackmailed by his former Party. In a time when homosexuality was
illegal, and socialism an international threat to capitalism,
Grayson was a clear target for those wanting to stamp out dissent.
This extraordinary biography reinstates to history a man who laid
the foundations for a whole generation of militant socialists in
Britain.
In his Preface to the 1902 first edition of Imperialism: A Study,
imperial critic J.A. Hobson demonstrates his prophetic talents by
noting, just as the Victorian age was ending and World War I was
brewing, that "Imperialism has been adopted as a more or less
conscious policy by several European States and threatens to break
down the political isolation of the United States." Though the book
speaks mostly of British imperialism of the period, Hobson
inevitably explores the general principals-and hidden motives-of
imperialist policy. Hobson covers: . the commercial value of
imperialism . imperialism as an outlet for population . economic
parasites of imperialism . imperialist finance . moral and
sentimental factors . and much more. With imperialism again a hot
topic in the political arena, Hobson's treatise continues to lend
invaluable, necessary insight into a complex ideology. British
writer JOHN ATKINSON HOBSON (1858-1940) was an historian and
economist as well as a popular lecturer on the topics. His other
books include The Evolution of Modern Capitalism (1894), The
Economics of Distribution (1900), The Economics of Unemployment
(1922), and the autobiographical Confessions of an Economic Heretic
(1938).
An old union rep, Joe, and his granddaughter, Arushi, spend a few
pleasant days together going over the history of the labour
movement. Over tea and sandwiches in his studio they consider the
whole wide sweep and points of connection throughout history.
Starting way back with the 14th-century Peasants' Revolt, taking in
the Levellers and the Luddites, the expansion of the unions in the
19th century, the height of their power in the `70s, and the great
conflicts and decline of the `80s. With a mix of serious research
and family jokes Joe and Arushi go into the complicated history,
the ideological battles, the class conflict, a consideration of
what unions are for, and what the future of unions may be.
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