Still working to recover. Please don't edit quite yet.

Difference between revisions of "Guardian (US)"

From Anarchopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
m (External Links: added backlink to Wikipedia)
m (Guardian (US) with even more penguins! moved to Guardian (US): undo vandal move)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 102: Line 102:
  
 
* '''Women in revolution the 1979 Guardian calendar'''.  Guardian Publications, New York. 1978.
 
* '''Women in revolution the 1979 Guardian calendar'''.  Guardian Publications, New York. 1978.
 +
 +
[[Category:Newspapers]]

Latest revision as of 04:02, 5 April 2006

The Guardian was a radical independent weekly newspaper published between 1948 and 1992 in New York City. The paper was founded by James Aronson, Cedric Belfrage and John McManus.

National Guardian[edit]

Supporters of the Progressive Party presidential campaign of Henry A. Wallace founded the paper as the National Guardian to circumvent the increasingly pro-Cold War mainstream press. At the outset, the National Guardian formed part of a vibrant leftist movement in New York, along with the daily evening newspaper PM and the labor left in the CIO District Council 65. It published early campaign reporting by Norman Mailer. The paper continued after the campaign as a locus of support for the New Deal and the New York American Labor Party (ALP).

When other papers on the left would not or could not publish news about Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the National Guardian closely followed the case. The reportage was so important to the defense that Aronson was named guardian to the Rosenberg's children.

After the dissolution of the ALP, the National Guardian supported the 1956 Independent-Socialist campaign of co-founder John McManus for New York Governor. The new initiative's vote fell to 35,000 from the ALP's 1950 vote of 208,000 and the left lost its ballot line. The paper remained outside particular party organizations, while continuing to advovocate a unified leftist party in the United States.

In the 1960s the paper became known for its independent and investigative journalism. Joanne Grant wrote groundbreaking articles on the Civil Rights Movement. Mark Lane wrote a critical account of the John F. Kennedy assassination in a special issue of the Guardian which appeared on December 13, 1963.

The Name Change and the New Left[edit]

The paper changed with the times, but not without internal conflict. As the sixties progressed, the Aronson and Old Left leadership disagreed with a more radical staff about the direction of the paper. In 1968, Aronson sold his shares to the staff the National Guardian became a New Left publication, shortening its name to Guardian in the process.

In the 1970s the Guardian was influential in the New Communist Movement. The paper editorially called for a new Marxist-Leninist party in the US. It never aligned with any particular group and remained critical of the small New Left party organizations. At the same time, it opened its pages to opposing viewpoints and continued a tradition of investigative journalism.

In the early 1980s the paper established Guardian Clubs for readers and discussed forming a new political party. The plan was abandoned as unlikely to result in unification of the US left.

The Guardian ceased publication in 1992 after years of financial difficulties and declining circulation.

See Also[edit]

External Links[edit]

  • Guardian (US) Wikipedia article sourced for this page May 20, 2005.

Guardian Publications[edit]


Related Links[edit]


Further Reading[edit]

Archives

  • Cedric Belfrage Papers. Archive #: Tamiment 143. Tamiment Library & Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University.
  • Sally Belfrage Papers. Archive #: Tamiment 189. Tamiment Library & Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives. New York University.


Articles

  • Georgakas, Dan. National Guardian/Guardian. Encyclopedia of the American Left pp 529-532 Oxford University Press Second Edition 1998. ISBN 0-19-512088-4.
  • Munk, Michael. The Guardian from Old to New Left. Radical America 2 (March-April 1968).
  • Rubinstein, Annette. The Independent Socialist Party. Paper presented at Explorations in the History of U.S. Trotskyism conference. New York University, Tamiment Library, 2000.


Books

  • Aronson, James and Belfrage, Cedrick.Something to Guard: The Stormy Life of the National Guardian, 1948 - 1967. 362 pages. Columbia University Press. 1978. ISBN 0231045107.
  • Elbaum, Max. Revolution in the Air: Sixties Radicals turn to Lenin, Mao and Che. 320 pages Publisher: Verso (June, 2002) ISBN 1859846173.
  • Grant, Joanne. Black Protest: 350 Years of History, Documents, and Analyses. Ballantine Books; 2nd edition (September 29, 1996). ISBN 044991223X.


Publications

  • Allen, Robert L. Dialectics of black power. Weekly Guardian Associates, New York. 1968.
  • Belfrage, Cedric. Why I am troublesome to the McCarthy mind. Weekly Guardian Associates, New York. 1955.
  • League for Proletarian Revolution. Which side are you on? Reply to the opportunists of the Revolutionary Union, October League, and the GUARDIAN newspaper. Red Star Publications, San Francisco. 1974
  • Munk, Michael. The New Left: What It Is ... Where It's Going ... What Makes it Move. 22pp. A National Guardian Pamphlet. New York. n.d. [1965]. Stapled softcover. Photos.
  • Pritt, Denis Nowell. An appeal for clemency. National Guardian, New York. [1952?].
  • Smith, Jack A. Unite the many, defeat the few. China's revolutionary line in foreign affairs. Guardian, New York. 1972.
  • Thomas, Tony. Marxism versus Maoism; a reply to the Guardian. Pathfinder Press, New York. 1974.
  • Women in revolution the 1979 Guardian calendar. Guardian Publications, New York. 1978.