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Comintern files from the CPGB archive

Order Number9781851171897
Typearchive
TitleCommunist International (Comintern) files from the CPGB archive
E-resourcehttp://www.microform.co.uk/guides/CP-CENT-CI.pdf
Related namesCommunist International
Communist Party of Great Britain. International Department
Morgan, Kevin, 1961-
Labour History Archive and Study Centre
Related titlesInternational Department of the CPGB
Description3 reels (or customised online access)
SeriesCommunist Party of Great Britain archive (microfilm ed.)
NotesSeries CP/CENT/CI. The miscellaneous files collected in this series date from 1920 to 1940 and give a flavour of the CPGB's subordinate status as a section of the Communist International until its dissolution in 1943. These include materials collected by students at Moscow's International Lenin School, which between 1926 and the mid-1930s welcomed some 160 British communists to take courses of up to three years.
Even after the Comintern's formal dissolution, there was no doubting either the significance of communism as an international movement, the critical position that Britain held in its conception of world affairs or the close interrelationship between them. Apart from the brief interlude of the Anglo-Soviet wartime alliance, Britain was more or less consistently depicted as a bulwark of world reaction, hostile to socialism, partial to fascism, beholden to American imperialism and an oppressor of its own colonies. The CPGB thus had a responsibility to link up with and itself promote anti-colonial struggles, a responsibility which critics alleged involved the party itself striking imperial postures in its relationships with colonial communists. Evidence both for this and for a more generous reading of colonial solidarity can be found in the archives. Pre-eminent in the earlier period was the party's interest in India, exemplified by R. Palme Dutt's position both as an authority on the sub-continent's affairs and as a contact with leading Indian nationalists. Of Dutt's reportedly extensive correspondence with Jawaharlal Nehru, nothing survives in the archive. Likewise there is little relating to the League Against Imperialism, an international front organisation based in London from 1933, and interested researchers will have to consult either the relevant Moscow archives or the papers of the league's secretary, Reginald Bridgeman, at the University of Hull. The archive does, however, contain two priceless individual deposits, namely those of Ben Bradley and Glyn Evans. (N.B. The fifth box of this series, containing previously published materials, has not been reproduced.)
Published March 2009. MAP has permission to offer remote access to images from this collection via niche.britishonlinearchives.co.uk as well as on microfilm.
Subject(s)JPFC : Marxism & Communism
1DBK : United Kingdom, Great Britain
3JJ : 20th century
Collection price£240 (US$ rate on application) on microfilm

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