Blog

  1. LeftWord Books is happily independent with 1804 Books, New York and Inkani Books, South Africa
    30
    Jul

    LeftWord Books is happily independent with 1804 Books, New York and Inkani Books, South Africa

    We are very happy to announce our collaboration with 1804 Books, New York and Inkani Books, South Africa.   We are a New Delhi-based publishing house that seeks to reflect the views of the left in India and South Asia. We publish critical and analytical works on a range of subjects, and pay special attention to works on Marxist theory. We project the interests of the working people and movements for social transformation. Set up in 1999, LeftWord also runs and manages May Day Bookstore.[...]
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  2. Call for Artists from LeftWord Books
    30
    Jul

    Call for Artists from LeftWord Books

    In recent times, India has witnessed lakhs of student protestors braving all odds to hit the streets – from Himachal to Kerala and from Pune to Assam. Since 2014, the attack on students and higher education has been relentless. From intensified neoliberal onslaught in terms of massive fee hikes and scraping students’ fellowships to politically-motivated appointments of incompetent administrators, Rohith Vemula’s institutional murder, saffronization of education, attempts to delegitimize [...]
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  3. Michael Carritt in the Archives by Suchetana Chattopadhyay
    27
    Jul

    Michael Carritt in the Archives by Suchetana Chattopadhyay

    Michael Carritt (1906-1990) secretly helped the Communist Party of India in the late colonial inter-war era while serving in the Indian Civil Service. The British intelligence file on him, which I found and read among Indian Political Intelligence files of the India Office Collection, contain the following: Carritt’s pension was withdrawn in 1940 after his retirement for his political conviction termed as 'grave misconduct'. In 1940, some documents were found in a trunk at Berkshire, buried [...]
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  4. The Impersonator and 'Comrade Schmidt'
    22
    Jun

    The Impersonator and 'Comrade Schmidt'

    Suchetana Chattopadhyay ‘I forget his name Mr. Dange. In fact I forgot your address too.’ A forgotten moment in Bomabay’s history is recorded in the dossiers. In late 1923, when S. A. Dange was in jail awaiting trial in what became known as Kanpur Bolshevik Conspiracy Case (1924), a police Inspector of the city's (anti-)Bolshevik Branch impersonated him. The aim of this masquerade was to meet one ‘Comrade Schmidt’. Claiming to represent the Communist International, he was a sailor an[...]
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  5. The Photo of Nalini Gupta
    15
    Jun

    The Photo of Nalini Gupta

    101 years ago on the evening of Saturday 12 June 1920, Nalini Bhushan Dasgupta, a former student of the school at Bolpur was singing ‘the Santiniketan song’ at the London YMCA in honour of Rabindranath. A reception had been organised by Bengalis living in England at the time to celebrate the poet's visit. Nalini later landed in Moscow via Berlin during the Third Congress of the Comintern (1921) and became a trusted helper of M. N. Roy, volunteering to travel to India on behalf of the émigrÃ[...]
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