American Communism and Soviet Russia

By Theodore Draper
Image of American Communism and Soviet Russia
FormatUSUK
Paperback$34.95 Buy£31.50 Buy

 This book set the parameters of the way that I and a lot of other people came to understand how the Communist Party had operated in America and it helped us to understand why it had failed so miserably.

Experts who have recommended this book

In an interview on Communism in America

Interview Extract:

Your first book is American Communism and Soviet Russia by Theodore Draper.

That is a fairly old book now. I read it many, many years ago at graduate school. Theodore Draper was the leading light among historians of American Communism.

This book had a major impact, because it was so thoroughly researched and had lots of great detail. It was one of the first books that really allowed you to study the story of how American Communism was shaped by its reaction to the Russian Revolution. 

There are other numerous examples of where disputes within the American Communist Party were resolved by all the participants hurrying off to Moscow and presenting their respective positions to the Communist International. Moscow was the ultimate arbiter of what the American Communist Party did. 

And why is this book in particular important to you and your work?

It set the parameters of the way that I and a lot of other people came to understand how the Communist Party had operated in America and it helped us to understand why it had failed so miserably. And I think that’s because American radical groups have never done terribly well in the United States for many complex reasons that people have been arguing about for many years. In the case of the Communist Party, along with those reasons, another is because it was so beholden to the Soviet Union.

Read full interview

About Harvey Klehr

Harvey Klehr is a professor of politics and history at Emory University. He is known for his books on the subject of the American Communist movement and on Soviet espionage in America. He has received a number of awards, including Emory’s Thomas Jefferson Award in 1999. He was recently nominated to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities.