Activist Literature

The Proletarian Literary Movement
1929-1941

Ongoing

Proletarian Literature

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In the 1930s, in the midst of the Great Depression, many New York writers used novels and poems as tools to address the working class, or “proletariat.” Using the written word to advance their political agenda, these writers espoused their views on class, communism, and global affairs. This movement “does not believe in literature for its own sake,” explained writer and editor Mike Gold, “but in literature that is useful, has a social function.”

As the nation’s publishing capital, New York was the center of the proletarian literary movement. Literary-minded activists formed organizations such as John Reed Clubs and the League of American Writers to spread their message; established magazines such as New Masses; and held debates at clubs and conferences. The proletarian literary movement was part of a broader cultural wing of the “Popular Front,” a broad anti-fascist political alliance initiated by the Communist International, in which artists used literature, music, theater, photography, and film to advocate for a global leftist politics. 

World War II, and specifically disillusionment with the foreign and domestic policies of the Soviet Union, altered the course of the movement. The Popular Front alliance shattered in 1939, when the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression pact with Nazi Germany. 

Increased internal factionalism and a changing geopolitical landscape led groups such as the League of American Writers to disband in 1943. Proletarian literary voices continued after the war, but the focus of New York’s intellectuals shifted from economics to a critique of culture.

 

Key Events

Global  Year    Local

The Russian Revolution ushers in the Soviet Union

1917  
  1919

"The Masses" reporter and poet John Reed publishes "Ten Days that Shook the World," his firsthand account of the Bolshevik Revolution, and later flees to the Soviet Union

  1926

"New Masses" founded (published until 1947)

Stock market crash prompts New York radicals to envision alternatives to capitalism 1929

 

  1930

Michael Gold’s "Jews Without Money" published

The "Partisan Review" is founded as a publication of the John Reed Club of New York

New York writers mobilize to protest the Scottsboro Boys, nine African-American youths falsely accused and convicted of rape in Alabama 1931  
New Deal begins 1933

 

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