Commonsense Anticommunism

Commonsense Anticommunism
Labor and Civil Liberties between the World Wars
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Artikel-Nr:
9781469622125
Veröffentl:
2014
Einband:
Paperback
Erscheinungsdatum:
01.12.2014
Seiten:
304
Autor:
Jennifer Luff
Gewicht:
521 g
Format:
234x156x18 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Jennifer Luff is lecturer in U.S. history at Durham University in the United Kingdom.
Between the Great War and Pearl Harbor, conservative labor leaders declared themselves America's "first line of defense" against Communism. In this surprising account, Jennifer Luff shows how the American Federation of Labor fanned popular anticommunism but defended Communists' civil liberties in the aftermath of the 1919 Red Scare. The AFL's "commonsense anticommunism," she argues, steered a middle course between the American Legion and the ACLU, helping to check campaigns for federal sedition laws. But in the 1930s, frustration with the New Dealorder led labor conservatives to redbait the Roosevelt administration and liberal unionists and abandon their reluctant civil libertarianism for red scare politics. That frustration contributed to the legal architecture of federal anticommunism that culminated with the McCarthyist fervor of the 1950s.Relying on untapped archival sources, Luff reveals how labor conservatives and the emerging civil liberties movement debated the proper role of the state in policing radicals and grappled with the challenges to the existing political order posed by Communist organizers. Surprising conclusions about familiar figures, like J. Edgar Hoover, and unfamiliar episodes, like a German plot to disrupt American munitions manufacture, make Luff's story a fresh retelling of the interwar years.

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