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Radical History Blog
Dennis Skinner: The Beast of Bolsover
He's a legendary figure in Labour politics - but who exactly was Dennis Skinner? When the Labour Party was founded, all of its MPs were workers, and most of them were miners. By 1970, however, the face of the Labour Party changed dramatically.
Antonio Gramsci and the Fight Against Fascism
His name is often bandied about - but who was Antonio Gramsci, and how did he end up in prison? When the Brazilian football legend Sócrates joined Italian side Fiorentina in 1984, he was asked which Italian footballer he most respected.
Then They Came for Me: The Story of Martin Niemöller
Martin Niemöller's confession is known across the world - but who actually was he? As far as radical, progressive politics is concerned, Martin Niemöller was not a commendable man.
2022: The Radical Year Ahead
2022 is looking like another busy year in the radical calendar! So, another year comes to an end - and what a year it's been... Donald Trump finally left the White House in January - though he did take some persuading.
Socialism With a Human Face: Alexander Dubček and the Prague Spring
The story of how radicals in Czechoslovakia tried to democratise Soviet rule It’s not often that Spring begins in January… But that’s exactly what happened in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic in 1968, when Alexander Dubček became – mouthful alert – First Secretary of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
Fighting for Something Worthwhile: The Life and Death of Ralph Fox
The British Communist and scholar who died fighting fascists in the Spanish Civil War"I am not just paying a conventional tribute to a dead man when I say that he was a real hero." On this day in 1936, Ralph Winston Fox was killed.
We Charge Genocide: Black Activists at the United Nations
The story of the black activists who accused the United States of genocide ‘The responsibility of being the first in history to charge the government of the United States of America with the crime of genocide is not one your petitioners take lightly.’ Eleanor Roosevelt called it ‘ridiculous’, but the Civil Rights Congress went ahead anyway.
Marx's Favourite Poet: The Life and Work of Heinrich Heine
A radical poet whose work was burned by the Nazis in Germany... spent his life interpreting the cold facts of political economy, but he still managed to find time for poems. Poetry, he believed, could make vivid the struggle of the masses.
The Liberator: William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolitionist Struggle
William Lloyd Garrison, circa 1870 The abolitionist you probably haven't heard of...
Not Without a Fight: The Sugar Cane Labor Strike of 1887
The story of the strike that ended in a massacre... American democracy, both political and economic, took huge strides forward when the Union won the Civil War in 1865. locked in the abolition of slavery and black voting rights.