fbpx
Wikipedia

Isaac Deutscher

Isaac Deutscher (Polish: Izaak Deutscher; 3 April 1907 – 19 August 1967) was a Polish Marxist writer, journalist and political activist who moved to the United Kingdom before the outbreak of World War II. He is best known as a biographer of Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin and as a commentator on Soviet affairs. His three-volume biography of Trotsky was highly influential among the British New Left in the 1960s and 1970s.[1]

Isaac Deutscher
Born(1907-04-03)3 April 1907
Died19 August 1967(1967-08-19) (aged 60)
NationalityPolish
CitizenshipBritish (from 1949)
Occupation(s)Historian, biographer
Known forStudies in Soviet history; biographies of Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin
SpouseTamara Deutscher

Early life and communist involvement in Poland

Deutscher was born in Chrzanów, a town in the Galicia region of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now in southern Poland), into a family of religiously observant Jews. He studied with a Hasidic rebbe and was acclaimed as a prodigy in the study of the Torah and the Talmud.[2] He lived through three pogroms in 1918 that followed the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire.[3] By the time of his bar mitzvah, however, he had lost his faith. He "tested God" by eating non-kosher food at the grave of a tzadik (holy person) on Yom Kippur. When nothing happened, he became an atheist. Deutscher first attracted notice as a poet, when he began publishing poems in Polish literary periodicals at the age of sixteen. His verse, in Yiddish and Polish, concerned Jewish and Polish mysticism, history and mythology, and he attempted to bridge the gulf between the Polish and Yiddish cultures. He also translated poetry from Hebrew, Latin, German, and Yiddish into Polish.[4]

Deutscher studied literature, history, and philosophy as an extramural student at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków.[5] Soon he left Kraków for Warsaw, where he studied philosophy, economics and Marxism. Around 1927, he joined the illegal Communist Party of Poland (KPP) and became the editor of the party's underground press.[5] He wrote for the Jewish Nasz Przegląd ("Our Review") and for the Marxist Miesięcznik Literacki ("The Literary Monthly").[6] In 1931 he toured the Soviet Union, seeing the economic conditions under the first Five Year Plan. The University of Moscow and the University of Minsk offered him posts as professor of history of socialism and of Marxist theory, but he declined the offers and returned to Poland.[5] Deutscher co-founded the first anti-Stalinist group in the Communist Party of Poland, protesting the party view that Nazism and social democracy were "not antipodes but twins."[5] This contradicted the then official communist line, according to which social democrats were "social fascists", the greatest enemies of the communist party. In an article "The Danger of Barbarism over Europe", Deutscher urged the formation of a united front of socialists and communists against Nazism. He was expelled from the KPP in 1932, officially for "exaggerating the danger of Nazism and spreading panic in the communist ranks."[5][7]

Move to Britain and journalism (1939–1947)

In April 1939, Deutscher left Poland for London as a correspondent for a Polish-Jewish newspaper for which he had worked as a proof reader for fourteen years.[5] This move saved his life and paved the way for his future career. He never returned to Poland and never saw any of his family again. He became a British subject in 1949, taking his oath of allegiance on 12 May 1949.[8]

Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 and Deutscher's connection with his newspaper was severed. He taught himself English and began writing for English magazines. He was soon a regular correspondent for the leading weekly The Economist. He joined the Trotskyist Revolutionary Workers League. In 1940, he joined the Polish Army in Scotland, but was interned as a dangerous subversive. Released in 1942, he joined the staff of The Economist and became its expert on Soviet affairs and military issues, and its chief European correspondent. He also wrote for The Observer as a roving European correspondent under the pen-name "Peregrine".[5] He was one of the so-called Shanghai Club (named after a restaurant in Soho) of left-leaning and emigre journalists that included Sebastian Haffner (also on The Observer), E. H. Carr, George Orwell, Barbara Ward and Jon Kimche.[9]

He left journalism in 1946–47 to write books.[5] Deutscher's name (with the remark "Sympathiser only") subsequently appeared on Orwell's list, a list of people (including many writers and journalists) which George Orwell prepared in March 1949 for the Information Research Department (IRD), a propaganda unit set up at the Foreign Office by the Labour government. Orwell considered the listed people to have pro-communist leanings and therefore to be inappropriate to write for the IRD.[10]

Biographer and academic (1947–1967)

Deutscher published his first major work, Stalin, A Political Biography in 1949. In the book he gave Stalin what he saw as his due for building a form of socialism in the Soviet Union, even if it was, in Deutscher's view, a perversion of the vision of Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky.[citation needed]

The Stalin biography made Deutscher a leading authority on Soviet affairs and the Russian Revolution. He followed it up with his most ambitious work, a three-volume biography of Trotsky: The Prophet Armed (1954), The Prophet Unarmed (1959) and The Prophet Outcast (1963). These books were based on detailed research into the Trotsky Archives at Harvard University. Much of the material contained in the third volume was previously unknown, since Trotsky's widow, Natalia Sedova, gave Deutscher access to the closed section of the archives. Deutscher planned to conclude his series with a study of Lenin, but The Life of Lenin remained incomplete at the time of Deutscher's death, partly due to a politically motivated denial of a university position to him.[11] As later revealed, Isaiah Berlin, who was asked to evaluate the academic credentials of Deutscher, argued against such a promotion because of the profoundly pro-communist militancy of the candidate.[12]

In the 1960s, the upsurge of left-wing sentiment that accompanied the Vietnam War made Deutscher a popular figure on university campuses in both Britain and the United States. By this time Deutscher had broken with conventional Trotskyism, although he never repudiated Trotsky himself and remained a committed Marxist. In 1965, Deutscher took part in the first "Teach-In" on Vietnam at the University of California, Berkeley, where thousands of students listened to his indictment of the Cold War.[5] He was G. M. Trevelyan Lecturer at the University of Cambridge for 1966–67 and also lectured for six weeks at the State University of New York.[5] In spring 1967, he guest-lectured at New York University, Princeton, Harvard and Columbia.[5] The G. M. Trevelyan Lectures, under the title The Unfinished Revolution, were published after Deutscher's sudden and unexpected death in Rome in 1967, where he went for an Italian TV broadcast. It was a play about the fall of Trotsky, written and directed by Marco Leto, starring Franco Parenti as Trotsky and Renzo Giovampietro as Stalin. A memorial prize honouring Deutscher, called the Deutscher Memorial Prize, is awarded annually to a book "which exemplifies the best and most innovative new writing in or about the Marxist tradition". In his works Deutscher made the distinction between classical Marxism and vulgar Marxism.[13]

Relation to Judaism and Zionism

Despite being an atheist, Deutscher emphasised the importance of his Jewish heritage. He coined the expression "non-Jewish Jew", to apply to himself and other Jewish humanists. Deutscher admired Elisha ben Abuyah, a Jewish heretic of the 2nd century AD.[citation needed] However, he did not engage in specifically Jewish politics. In Warsaw, he joined the communist party, not the Jewish Bund, whose "Yiddishist" views he opposed.

Deutscher wrote: "Religion? I am an atheist. Jewish nationalism? I am an internationalist. In neither sense am I therefore a Jew. I am, however, a Jew by force of my unconditional solidarity with the persecuted and exterminated. I am a Jew because I feel the pulse of Jewish history; because I should like to do all I can to assure the real, not spurious, security and self-respect of the Jews."[14]

Before World War II, Deutscher opposed Zionism as economically retrograde and harmful to the cause of international socialism. But in the aftermath of the Holocaust he regretted his pre-war views, lamenting that "If, instead of arguing against Zionism in the 1920s and 1930s, I had urged European Jews to go to Palestine, I might have helped to save some of the lives that were to be extinguished in Hitler's gas chambers." He argued the case for establishing Israel as a "historic necessity", to provide a home for the surviving Jews of Europe; and said that his anti-Zionism, which "I have, of course, long since abandoned ... was based on a confidence in the European labour movement, or, more broadly, a confidence in European society and civilisation which that society and civilisation have not justified."[15] In the 1960s, he became more critical of Israel for its failure to recognise the dispossession of the Palestinians, and after the Six-Day War of 1967 he demanded that Israel withdraw from the occupied territories. "This six-day wonder", he commented, "the latest, all-too-easy triumph of Israeli arms will be seen one day ... to have been a disaster in the first instance for Israel itself."[16]

Regarding the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Deutscher wrote the following allegory: "A man once jumped from the top floor of a burning house in which many members of his family had already perished. He managed to save his life; but as he was falling he hit a person standing down below and broke that person's legs and arms. The jumping man had no choice; yet to the man with the broken limbs he was the cause of his misfortune. If both behaved rationally, they would not become enemies. The man who escaped from the blazing house, having recovered, would have tried to help and console the other sufferer; and the latter might have realized that he was the victim of circumstances over which neither of them had control. But look what happens when these people behave irrationally. The injured man blames the other for his misery and swears to make him pay for it. The other, afraid of the crippled man's revenge, insults him, kicks him, and beats him up whenever they meet. The kicked man again swears revenge and is again punched and punished. The bitter enmity, so fortuitous at first, hardens and comes to overshadow the whole existence of both men and to poison their minds."[17]

Deutscher wrote the following passages in "The Israeli Arab War, June 1967" (1967):

"Still we must exercise our judgment and must not allow it to be clouded by emotions and memories, however deep or haunting. We should not allow even invocations of Auschwitz to blackmail us into supporting the wrong cause." (Quoted in Prophets Outcast, p. 184, Nation Books, 2004.)

"To justify or condone Israel's wars against the Arabs is to render Israel a very bad service indeed and to harm its own long-term interest. Israel's security, let me repeat, was not enhanced by the wars of 1956 and 1967; it was undermined and compromised by them. The 'friends of Israel' have in fact abetted Israel in a ruinous course." (Quoted in Prophets Outcast, p. 184, Nation Books, 2004.)

Selected works

  • Stalin: a Political Biography (1949); a slightly expanded edition in 1961
  • Soviet Trade Unions: Their Place in Soviet Labour Policy (1950)
  • Russia After Stalin (1953), first published as Russia, What Next? (1953)
  • The Prophet Armed: Trotsky, 1879–1921 (1954)
  • Heretics and renegades: and other essays (1955)
  • Russia in transition, and other essays (1957)
  • "Message of the Non-Jewish Jew" (1958)
  • The Prophet Unarmed: Trotsky, 1921–1929 (1959)
  • Great contest: Russia and the West (1960)
  • The Prophet Outcast: Trotsky, 1929–1940 (1963)
  • Ironies of History: Essays on Contemporary Communism (1966)
  • Isaac Deutscher on the Israeli-Arab War: an interview with the late Isaac Deutscher (1967)
  • The Unfinished Revolution: Russia 1917–1967 (G. M. Trevelyan lectures) (1967)
  • Non-Jewish Jew and other essays (London: OUP, 1968)
  • An Open Letter to Władysław Gomułka and the Central Committee of the Polish Workers Party (1968)
  • Lenin's Childhood (1970)
  • Russia, China, and the West 1953–1966 (Edited by Fred Halliday) (1970)
  • Marxism in our time, (Edited by Tamara Deutscher) (London: Cape, 1972)
  • Stalin (1983)
  • Marxism, Wars, and Revolutions: essays from four decades (Edited by Tamara Deutscher) (1984)
  • The Great Purges. (Oxford : Blackwell, 1984)

See also

References

  1. ^ Neil Davidson, "The prophet, his biographer and the watchtower" 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine, International Socialism 104, 2004.
  2. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays, Introduction.
  3. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays, pp. 33-34.
  4. ^ David Caute, Isaac and Isaiah: The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic, pp. 1–35. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tamara Deutscher (1968), "Isaac Deutscher 1907 – 1967", Preface to The Non-Jewish Jew & Other Essays.
  6. ^ Marci Shore, Caviar and Ashes, p. 68. Yale University Press, New Haven, 2006. ISBN 978-0-300-14328-7.
  7. ^ David Caute, Isaac and Isaiah, pp. 99–106.
  8. ^ London Gazette 21 June 1949 London Gazette.
  9. ^ Koutsopanagou, Gioula (2020). The British Press and the Greek Crisis, 1943–1949: Orchestrating the Cold-War 'Consensus' in Britain. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 52–53. ISBN 1137551550.
  10. ^ "Orwell's List" by Timothy Garton Ash. The New York Review of Books Volume 50, Number 14. 25 September 2003.
  11. ^ M. Ignatieff, Isaiah Berlin: A Life (London, 1998), pp. 93, 235; cited in Neil Davidson, "The prophet, his biographer and the watchtower" 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine, International Socialism 104, 2004.
  12. ^ David Caute, Isaac and Isaiah.
  13. ^ Deutscher lecture 1965.
  14. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. "Who is a Jew?" In The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays, p. 51. Tamara Deutscher, ed. and Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 1968.
  15. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. "Israel's Spiritual Climate," The Reporter, 27 April and 11 May 1954, available at https://www.marxists.org/archive/deutscher/1954/israel.htm
  16. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. An Interview: On the Israeli-Arab War, pp. 30–45. New Left Review I/44 (July–August 1967).
  17. ^ Deutscher, Isaac. The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays, pp. 136–137.

Sources

  • Caute David. Isaac and Isaiah: The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic (Yale University Press 2013).
  • Cliff, Tony, The End of the Road: Isaac Deutscher's Capitulation to Stalinism, 1963.
  • Horowitz, David, Isaac Deutscher: The Man and his work. London: Macdonald, 1971.
  • Labedz, Leopold Issac Deutscher: Historian, Prophet, Biographer, Survey Volume 30, Issue # 1–2, March 1988.
  • Laqueur, Walter The Fate of the Revolution: Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present, New York : Scribner, 1987 ISBN 0-684-18903-8.
  • Neil Davidson, The prophet, his biographer and the watchtower 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine, International Socialism 104, 2004.

Further reading

  • Bruce Robbins, "The Red Emigrant", The Nation, 17 April 2017.

External links

  • Isaac Deutscher Archive at marxists.org
  • "Russia in transition", Universities & Left Review, 1957
  • "The Failure of Khrushchevism", Socialist Register, 1965
  • "Maoism-Its Origins, Background and Outlook", Socialist Register, 1964
  • "Marxism in Our Time"
  • "The Tragedy of the Polish Communist Party", Socialist Register, 1982
  • The Lubitz TrotskyanaNet
  • Isaac Deutscher Speaks! (English) "I still believe!": Berkeley Anti-war Teach-in, 1965 — YouTube recording
  • Theodor Bergmann, "Rosa Luxemburg and Isaac Deutscher: Two Jewish Communist Heretics", 1999

isaac, deutscher, polish, izaak, deutscher, april, 1907, august, 1967, polish, marxist, writer, journalist, political, activist, moved, united, kingdom, before, outbreak, world, best, known, biographer, leon, trotsky, joseph, stalin, commentator, soviet, affai. Isaac Deutscher Polish Izaak Deutscher 3 April 1907 19 August 1967 was a Polish Marxist writer journalist and political activist who moved to the United Kingdom before the outbreak of World War II He is best known as a biographer of Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin and as a commentator on Soviet affairs His three volume biography of Trotsky was highly influential among the British New Left in the 1960s and 1970s 1 Isaac DeutscherBorn 1907 04 03 3 April 1907Chrzanow Galicia Austria Hungary today Poland Died19 August 1967 1967 08 19 aged 60 Rome ItalyNationalityPolishCitizenshipBritish from 1949 Occupation s Historian biographerKnown forStudies in Soviet history biographies of Leon Trotsky and Joseph StalinSpouseTamara Deutscher Contents 1 Early life and communist involvement in Poland 2 Move to Britain and journalism 1939 1947 3 Biographer and academic 1947 1967 4 Relation to Judaism and Zionism 5 Selected works 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and communist involvement in Poland EditDeutscher was born in Chrzanow a town in the Galicia region of the Austro Hungarian Empire now in southern Poland into a family of religiously observant Jews He studied with a Hasidic rebbe and was acclaimed as a prodigy in the study of the Torah and the Talmud 2 He lived through three pogroms in 1918 that followed the collapse of the Austro Hungarian empire 3 By the time of his bar mitzvah however he had lost his faith He tested God by eating non kosher food at the grave of a tzadik holy person on Yom Kippur When nothing happened he became an atheist Deutscher first attracted notice as a poet when he began publishing poems in Polish literary periodicals at the age of sixteen His verse in Yiddish and Polish concerned Jewish and Polish mysticism history and mythology and he attempted to bridge the gulf between the Polish and Yiddish cultures He also translated poetry from Hebrew Latin German and Yiddish into Polish 4 Deutscher studied literature history and philosophy as an extramural student at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow 5 Soon he left Krakow for Warsaw where he studied philosophy economics and Marxism Around 1927 he joined the illegal Communist Party of Poland KPP and became the editor of the party s underground press 5 He wrote for the Jewish Nasz Przeglad Our Review and for the Marxist Miesiecznik Literacki The Literary Monthly 6 In 1931 he toured the Soviet Union seeing the economic conditions under the first Five Year Plan The University of Moscow and the University of Minsk offered him posts as professor of history of socialism and of Marxist theory but he declined the offers and returned to Poland 5 Deutscher co founded the first anti Stalinist group in the Communist Party of Poland protesting the party view that Nazism and social democracy were not antipodes but twins 5 This contradicted the then official communist line according to which social democrats were social fascists the greatest enemies of the communist party In an article The Danger of Barbarism over Europe Deutscher urged the formation of a united front of socialists and communists against Nazism He was expelled from the KPP in 1932 officially for exaggerating the danger of Nazism and spreading panic in the communist ranks 5 7 Move to Britain and journalism 1939 1947 EditIn April 1939 Deutscher left Poland for London as a correspondent for a Polish Jewish newspaper for which he had worked as a proof reader for fourteen years 5 This move saved his life and paved the way for his future career He never returned to Poland and never saw any of his family again He became a British subject in 1949 taking his oath of allegiance on 12 May 1949 8 Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 and Deutscher s connection with his newspaper was severed He taught himself English and began writing for English magazines He was soon a regular correspondent for the leading weekly The Economist He joined the Trotskyist Revolutionary Workers League In 1940 he joined the Polish Army in Scotland but was interned as a dangerous subversive Released in 1942 he joined the staff of The Economist and became its expert on Soviet affairs and military issues and its chief European correspondent He also wrote for The Observer as a roving European correspondent under the pen name Peregrine 5 He was one of the so called Shanghai Club named after a restaurant in Soho of left leaning and emigre journalists that included Sebastian Haffner also on The Observer E H Carr George Orwell Barbara Ward and Jon Kimche 9 He left journalism in 1946 47 to write books 5 Deutscher s name with the remark Sympathiser only subsequently appeared on Orwell s list a list of people including many writers and journalists which George Orwell prepared in March 1949 for the Information Research Department IRD a propaganda unit set up at the Foreign Office by the Labour government Orwell considered the listed people to have pro communist leanings and therefore to be inappropriate to write for the IRD 10 Biographer and academic 1947 1967 EditDeutscher published his first major work Stalin A Political Biography in 1949 In the book he gave Stalin what he saw as his due for building a form of socialism in the Soviet Union even if it was in Deutscher s view a perversion of the vision of Karl Marx Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky citation needed The Stalin biography made Deutscher a leading authority on Soviet affairs and the Russian Revolution He followed it up with his most ambitious work a three volume biography of Trotsky The Prophet Armed 1954 The Prophet Unarmed 1959 and The Prophet Outcast 1963 These books were based on detailed research into the Trotsky Archives at Harvard University Much of the material contained in the third volume was previously unknown since Trotsky s widow Natalia Sedova gave Deutscher access to the closed section of the archives Deutscher planned to conclude his series with a study of Lenin but The Life of Lenin remained incomplete at the time of Deutscher s death partly due to a politically motivated denial of a university position to him 11 As later revealed Isaiah Berlin who was asked to evaluate the academic credentials of Deutscher argued against such a promotion because of the profoundly pro communist militancy of the candidate 12 In the 1960s the upsurge of left wing sentiment that accompanied the Vietnam War made Deutscher a popular figure on university campuses in both Britain and the United States By this time Deutscher had broken with conventional Trotskyism although he never repudiated Trotsky himself and remained a committed Marxist In 1965 Deutscher took part in the first Teach In on Vietnam at the University of California Berkeley where thousands of students listened to his indictment of the Cold War 5 He was G M Trevelyan Lecturer at the University of Cambridge for 1966 67 and also lectured for six weeks at the State University of New York 5 In spring 1967 he guest lectured at New York University Princeton Harvard and Columbia 5 The G M Trevelyan Lectures under the title The Unfinished Revolution were published after Deutscher s sudden and unexpected death in Rome in 1967 where he went for an Italian TV broadcast It was a play about the fall of Trotsky written and directed by Marco Leto starring Franco Parenti as Trotsky and Renzo Giovampietro as Stalin A memorial prize honouring Deutscher called the Deutscher Memorial Prize is awarded annually to a book which exemplifies the best and most innovative new writing in or about the Marxist tradition In his works Deutscher made the distinction between classical Marxism and vulgar Marxism 13 Relation to Judaism and Zionism EditDespite being an atheist Deutscher emphasised the importance of his Jewish heritage He coined the expression non Jewish Jew to apply to himself and other Jewish humanists Deutscher admired Elisha ben Abuyah a Jewish heretic of the 2nd century AD citation needed However he did not engage in specifically Jewish politics In Warsaw he joined the communist party not the Jewish Bund whose Yiddishist views he opposed Deutscher wrote Religion I am an atheist Jewish nationalism I am an internationalist In neither sense am I therefore a Jew I am however a Jew by force of my unconditional solidarity with the persecuted and exterminated I am a Jew because I feel the pulse of Jewish history because I should like to do all I can to assure the real not spurious security and self respect of the Jews 14 Before World War II Deutscher opposed Zionism as economically retrograde and harmful to the cause of international socialism But in the aftermath of the Holocaust he regretted his pre war views lamenting that If instead of arguing against Zionism in the 1920s and 1930s I had urged European Jews to go to Palestine I might have helped to save some of the lives that were to be extinguished in Hitler s gas chambers He argued the case for establishing Israel as a historic necessity to provide a home for the surviving Jews of Europe and said that his anti Zionism which I have of course long since abandoned was based on a confidence in the European labour movement or more broadly a confidence in European society and civilisation which that society and civilisation have not justified 15 In the 1960s he became more critical of Israel for its failure to recognise the dispossession of the Palestinians and after the Six Day War of 1967 he demanded that Israel withdraw from the occupied territories This six day wonder he commented the latest all too easy triumph of Israeli arms will be seen one day to have been a disaster in the first instance for Israel itself 16 Regarding the Israeli Palestinian conflict Deutscher wrote the following allegory A man once jumped from the top floor of a burning house in which many members of his family had already perished He managed to save his life but as he was falling he hit a person standing down below and broke that person s legs and arms The jumping man had no choice yet to the man with the broken limbs he was the cause of his misfortune If both behaved rationally they would not become enemies The man who escaped from the blazing house having recovered would have tried to help and console the other sufferer and the latter might have realized that he was the victim of circumstances over which neither of them had control But look what happens when these people behave irrationally The injured man blames the other for his misery and swears to make him pay for it The other afraid of the crippled man s revenge insults him kicks him and beats him up whenever they meet The kicked man again swears revenge and is again punched and punished The bitter enmity so fortuitous at first hardens and comes to overshadow the whole existence of both men and to poison their minds 17 Deutscher wrote the following passages in The Israeli Arab War June 1967 1967 Still we must exercise our judgment and must not allow it to be clouded by emotions and memories however deep or haunting We should not allow even invocations of Auschwitz to blackmail us into supporting the wrong cause Quoted in Prophets Outcast p 184 Nation Books 2004 To justify or condone Israel s wars against the Arabs is to render Israel a very bad service indeed and to harm its own long term interest Israel s security let me repeat was not enhanced by the wars of 1956 and 1967 it was undermined and compromised by them The friends of Israel have in fact abetted Israel in a ruinous course Quoted in Prophets Outcast p 184 Nation Books 2004 Selected works EditStalin a Political Biography 1949 a slightly expanded edition in 1961 Soviet Trade Unions Their Place in Soviet Labour Policy 1950 Russia After Stalin 1953 first published as Russia What Next 1953 The Prophet Armed Trotsky 1879 1921 1954 Heretics and renegades and other essays 1955 Russia in transition and other essays 1957 Message of the Non Jewish Jew 1958 The Prophet Unarmed Trotsky 1921 1929 1959 Great contest Russia and the West 1960 The Prophet Outcast Trotsky 1929 1940 1963 Ironies of History Essays on Contemporary Communism 1966 Isaac Deutscher on the Israeli Arab War an interview with the late Isaac Deutscher 1967 The Unfinished Revolution Russia 1917 1967 G M Trevelyan lectures 1967 Non Jewish Jew and other essays London OUP 1968 An Open Letter to Wladyslaw Gomulka and the Central Committee of the Polish Workers Party 1968 Lenin s Childhood 1970 Russia China and the West 1953 1966 Edited by Fred Halliday 1970 Marxism in our time Edited by Tamara Deutscher London Cape 1972 Stalin 1983 Marxism Wars and Revolutions essays from four decades Edited by Tamara Deutscher 1984 The Great Purges Oxford Blackwell 1984 See also EditDeutscher Memorial PrizeReferences Edit Neil Davidson The prophet his biographer and the watchtower Archived 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine International Socialism 104 2004 Deutscher Isaac The Non Jewish Jew and Other Essays Introduction Deutscher Isaac The Non Jewish Jew and Other Essays pp 33 34 David Caute Isaac and Isaiah The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic pp 1 35 New Haven and London Yale University Press 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k Tamara Deutscher 1968 Isaac Deutscher 1907 1967 Preface to The Non Jewish Jew amp Other Essays Marci Shore Caviar and Ashes p 68 Yale University Press New Haven 2006 ISBN 978 0 300 14328 7 David Caute Isaac and Isaiah pp 99 106 London Gazette 21 June 1949 London Gazette Koutsopanagou Gioula 2020 The British Press and the Greek Crisis 1943 1949 Orchestrating the Cold War Consensus in Britain London Palgrave Macmillan pp 52 53 ISBN 1137551550 Orwell s List by Timothy Garton Ash The New York Review of Books Volume 50 Number 14 25 September 2003 M Ignatieff Isaiah Berlin A Life London 1998 pp 93 235 cited in Neil Davidson The prophet his biographer and the watchtower Archived 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine International Socialism 104 2004 David Caute Isaac and Isaiah Deutscher lecture 1965 Deutscher Isaac Who is a Jew In The Non Jewish Jew and Other Essays p 51 Tamara Deutscher ed and Introduction New York Oxford University Press 1968 Deutscher Isaac Israel s Spiritual Climate The Reporter 27 April and 11 May 1954 available at https www marxists org archive deutscher 1954 israel htm Deutscher Isaac An Interview On the Israeli Arab War pp 30 45 New Left Review I 44 July August 1967 Deutscher Isaac The Non Jewish Jew and Other Essays pp 136 137 Sources EditCaute David Isaac and Isaiah The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic Yale University Press 2013 Cliff Tony The End of the Road Isaac Deutscher s Capitulation to Stalinism 1963 Horowitz David Isaac Deutscher The Man and his work London Macdonald 1971 Labedz Leopold Issac Deutscher Historian Prophet Biographer Survey Volume 30 Issue 1 2 March 1988 Laqueur Walter The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner 1987 ISBN 0 684 18903 8 Neil Davidson The prophet his biographer and the watchtower Archived 6 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine International Socialism 104 2004 Further reading EditBruce Robbins The Red Emigrant The Nation 17 April 2017 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Isaac Deutscher Isaac Deutscher Archive at marxists org Russia in transition Universities amp Left Review 1957 The Failure of Khrushchevism Socialist Register 1965 Maoism Its Origins Background and Outlook Socialist Register 1964 Marxism in Our Time The Tragedy of the Polish Communist Party Socialist Register 1982 The Lubitz TrotskyanaNet Isaac Deutscher Speaks English I still believe Berkeley Anti war Teach in 1965 YouTube recording Theodor Bergmann Rosa Luxemburg and Isaac Deutscher Two Jewish Communist Heretics 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isaac Deutscher amp oldid 1138321232, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.