Restoring Stalinism to communist history

Article


McIlroy, J. 2013. Restoring Stalinism to communist history. Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory. 41 (4), pp. 599-622. https://doi.org/10.1080/03017605.2013.876816
TypeArticle
TitleRestoring Stalinism to communist history
AuthorsMcIlroy, J.
Abstract

From the late 1920s into the 1960s Stalinism dominated British Communism. It transformed the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) into a Soviet satellite and reformist hybrid. Policy swings animated by Russian policy compromised the CPGB’s work in the trade unions. They facilitated adaptation to trade unionism and accommodation
with labourism, although these tendencies were periodically challenged. This article assesses the writings of Nina Fishman. A self-styled ‘revisionist’, Fishman
sidelined Stalinism, located the dynamics of the CPGB’s union intervention in British culture, party leaders’ conscious economism and disregard of bureaucratic centralism. She applauded their move from revolutionary politics to reformism. Her delineation of the development of British Communism and dismissal of Soviet hegemony is
conceptually and evidentially flawed. Marxist conceptions of Stalinism, trade unionism and economism provide a superior means of understanding British Communism than
Fishman’s inadequately evidenced assertion of the CPGB’s independence, trade union loyalism and revolutionary pragmatism.

PublisherRoutledge
JournalCritique: Journal of Socialist Theory
ISSN0301-7605
Publication dates
Print2013
Publication process dates
Deposited03 Apr 2014
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/03017605.2013.876816
LanguageEnglish
Permalink -

https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/84qvx

Restricted files

File

  • 16
    total views
  • 0
    total downloads
  • 0
    views this month
  • 0
    downloads this month

Export as