In the Shadow of the Dictators: The British Left in the 1930s
By (Author) Paul Corthorn
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
30th November 2012
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Far-right political ideologies and movements
320.531094109043
Paperback
288
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
354g
shaped above all by their constantly changing views of another dictatorship: the Soviet Union under Stalin.
'An elegant piece of innovative research on the Labour left between 1932 and 1939 [...] based on an impressive amount of research and on a perceptive and sensitive handling of the evidence collected.' - Professor E F Biagini, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History, University of Cambridge 'Paul Corthorn presents a detailed and nuanced study of the ideological and policy currents within ght ebRitish Left when faced witht he rise of fascism [...] In analysing the relationship between the international events and the ideological political struggle with Labour, Corthorn advances a new interpretation.' - Larry L Witherell, Professor of History, Minnesota State University 'This book reflects the enduring fascination that the foreign policy debates of the 1930s still hold for historians of British politics [and] is an engaging study that constitutes an excellent analysis of the Left's ideas [...] This is an impressive contribution to our understanding of the small groups who were so vocal in public life during the years before the Second World War.' - Robert Crowcroft, Lecturer in Contemporary History, University of Edinburgh 'In the Shadow of the Dictators claims to advance a new interpretation on established scholarship and succeeds by a close analysis of both the Left and the dictators and dictatorships that shaped the intellectual and rhetorical framework within which the Left worked in the 1930s. Corthorn has undoubtedly succeeded in this aim [... It] adds much to our understanding of this most interesting and complex of subjects.' - Labour History Review
Paul Corthorn is Lecturer in Modern British History at Queen's University, Belfast, having taught previously at the University College, Oxford. He is the co-editor of 'The British Labour Party and the Wider World' (forthcoming, I.B.Tauris).