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Journal ArticleDOI

United States Communist History Bibliography 2019

Peter Meyer Filardo
- 13 May 2020 - 
- Vol. 19, pp 148-190
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TLDR
The American Communism and Anticommunism: A Historian's Bibliography and Guide to the Literature as discussed by the authors contains over 10,000 entries, most annotated, is extensively topically subdivided, and is particularly strong on anti-Communism.
Abstract
The subject of the annual Bibliography is the English language scholarly literature of U.S. Communism, supplemented by citations from serious non-scholarly journals, journals of opinion, obituaries, etc. The literature “of” Communism includes not only material directly about Communism, but selected materials overlapping with, tangential or adjacent to the subject of U.S. Communism; or otherwise of close interest to scholars of Communism. This broad approach is especially necessary as the “classical” era of Communism (1919-1991) recedes into the past. While research output directly about U.S. Communism per se may have declined, nevertheless, scholarship related to U.S. Communism continues, and has broadened its disciplinary, topical, and theoretical approaches. Anticommunism also receives extensive coverage. Reviews are excluded. Informational annotations are provided where a work’s title does not convey its chronological or geographical scope, key personal or corporate names, subject or relevance. For most edited monographs, and for some single-author monographs, the table of contents and/or the author’s or publisher’s abstract are provided, when available and appropriate. An outstanding cumulative bibliography, through 2008, is John Earl Haynes’ American Communism and Anticommunism: A Historian’s Bibliography and Guide to the Literature. It contains over 10,000 entries, most annotated, is extensively topically subdivided, and is particularly strong on anti-Communism. Researchers are strongly urged to make use of it. (http://www.johnearlhaynes.org/page94.html).

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The Impact of the Cold War and the Second Red Scare on the 1952 American Presidential Election

Dana C Johns
TL;DR: In the fall of 1952, General Dwight D. Eisenhower and Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson II faced off in a heated Presidential Election as discussed by the authors, and despite both candidates holding similar views, in the end General Eisenhower prevailed.
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Radical Resistance: Constructions of a Transnational Self in Angela Davis's and Cynthia McKinney’s Memoirs

TL;DR: Linke et al. as mentioned in this paper compare the life narratives by Angela Davis and Cynthia McKinney, two transnationally active radical Black intellectuals known for their fierce opposition to mainstream US politics.
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The Passaic Textile Strike Documentary: The Role of Film in Building Solidarity

TL;DR: In the Passaic strike of 1926 and 1927, more than 15,000 textile workers in New Jersey struck against a wage cut, for shorter hours, and for better conditions as mentioned in this paper.
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“Voice of the People”: Sidney Roger, the Labor/Left, and Broadcasting in San Francisco, 1945–1950

TL;DR: In this article, KGO canceled Sidney Roger's news commentary program, arguing that Roger no longer satisfied the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) requirement that news commentary programs be newsworthy.
References
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OSS : the secret history of America's first central intelligence agency

TL;DR: OSS: America's First Central Intelligence Agency (OSS) as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the history of covert operations in the United States military and is the origin of the term covert action.
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Kiss Me Deadly: Communism, Motherhood, and Cold War Movies

Michael Rogin
- 01 Apr 1984 - 
TL;DR: The history of demonology in American politics comprises three major moments: the first is racial, the second is ethnic, and the third is the cold war as mentioned in this paper, where the targets of countersubversion moved from the reds and blacks of frontier, agrarian America to the working-class "savages" and alien "reds" of urban, industrializing America.
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The Fascist racial turn: the view from the Italian-American community in the United States

TL;DR: The authors examines Italian-Americans' reaction to the Fascist embrace of anti-Semitism in 1938, primarily by means of a perusal of the Italian-language press in the U.S.
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Against intolerance: the red scare roots of legal liberalism

TL;DR: The authors argues that important antecedents of post-New Deal American liberalism emerged in response to the First Red Scare and argue that the pervasiveness of peacetime state-sponsored repression undermined progressive confidence in administrative governance and generated support for so-called personal rights.