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History of the Communist Party of Australia #1

The Reds: The Communist Party of Australia from Origins to Illegality

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The Communist Party was a major part of Australia's political landscape for more than half a century. It enlisted its members in a world-wide cause that was charged with hopes for revolutionary change and imbued with the iron discipline of warriors in a class war. It attracted fierce hostility; it inspired devotion.
Australian communism wielded an influence far beyond its size. The Party came to control many of the country's largest trade unions. Its supporters included writers and artists who influenced much of Australia's cultural life. It was active in a broad range of social movements. It became the target of sustained surveillance and penetration by state police and federal security agencies. It retains the attention of many despite the revelations of the post-Cold War era.
Stuart Macintyre's history is the first comprehensive account of Australian communism. It is based on a new range of sources and uses extensive interviews to recapture the experience of early Australian communists. Full of fascinating characters and incidents, this is the most ambitious work of a leading Australian historian.

482 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Stuart Macintyre

53 books9 followers
Stuart Macintyre was Emeritus Laureate Professor of the University of Melbourne and a Professorial Fellow of the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies. He was president of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia from 2007 to 2009 and a life member of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. With Alison Bashford, he edited the Cambridge History of Australia (2013). His last book, published posthumously, is The Party: The Communist Party of Australia from heyday to reckoning (2022), the second volume in his history of the Communist Party of Australia.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Luke McCarthy.
111 reviews53 followers
May 28, 2022
Macintyre is a terrific researcher but not a particularly involving storyteller. There is an at-times suffocating level of detail here, with certain (seemingly minor) moments in the CPA’s history getting pages upon pages of coverage whilst other moments (which feel much more important) are almost glossed over. Regardless of these issues, this is absolutely riveting in its own way. Macintyre provides a broad, clear-minded view of Australian labour history, and the depth and detail here is astounding. It is long, dense and undeniably dry, but I think for these exact reasons, I enjoyed the feeling of total immersion which it provided.
Profile Image for Jett.
13 reviews1 follower
October 1, 2021
Macintyre wrote a well-documented and level obituary to Australia's most radical party. Despite being filled with hardworking and principled comrades in search of a new world, Macintyre makes it clear, the men of the Communist Party were sexist. More than that, the campaigns the Party devised were forlorn and utopian; distant from the labour movement, foreign to the Australian public. The cherry on top of the Party's inutility and sexism is its slavish obedience to the Comintern line. These insights profit from hindsight and make earlier attempts seem entirely anachronistic. A standard for some time to come.
Profile Image for Greg.
569 reviews14 followers
July 30, 2022
A very interesting account of a major force in Australian political history which has not been much written about in the past. Amazing to think how such a small group had so much impact in Australia - it inspired many and scared even more.

Very well written and balanced. The author was a member of the Communist Party of Australia but is very fair in his treatment.

The book covers the period from 1920 to 1939. The author has recently written a sequel which takes the history up to 1970 called The Party which I will be reading soon. Although the party wasn't formally disbanded until 1991 it was a farce by then.
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