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Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
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13644 |
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BOOK WORLD
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8 / 1988 |
3,230 Words |
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Morris Dickstein Morris Dickstein teaches English at Queens College and is the
author of Gates of Eden: American Culture in the Sixties,
which will appear in a new edition from Penguin Books in
January. |
POLITICAL PASSAGES
Journeys of Change through Two Decades, 1968-1988
John H. Bunzel, editor
New York: The Free Press, 1988
354pp., $21.95
In 1950, Richard Crossman, a leading member of the British Labour Party, assembled a book that proved to be one of the political milestones of the postwar era. The God That Failed was a collection of riveting memoirs by six leading writers--including Arthur Koestler, Richard Wright, Ignazio Silone, and Andre Gide--who had been attracted to communism in the 1920s and 1930s but had eventually grown disaffected, even horrified, by what they had witnessed as communicants of this faith.
Unlike many cold warriors of this period, these authors had impeccable credentials as independent thinkers with radical or liberal sympathies. They also had the literary power to bring their bizarre experiences to life. Their accounts were not polemics so much as personal testimonies built around scenes that stay in one's mind as vividly as anything in Kafka. Who can forget Silone's wide-eyed incredulity, when, as a representative of the Italian Communist Party in Moscow, in the presence of Stalin, he and his colleagues were asked to condemn a document by Trotsky that no one had actually read? Who can forget the kangaroo court described by Wright, when the local party unit subjected one of its members to a humiliating auto-da-fé?
If Koestler's, Gide's, and Silone's memoirs have lost none of their force after nearly four decades,
... (1998 of 19135 Characters)
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