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Communism: A Love Story (2007)

par Jeff Sparrow

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2221,017,419 (4.5)1
'What I remember most about the communists is their passion... 'For more than seventy years, idealists and rebels of all stripes saw in the Communist Party the best hope for a world remade. Who were the people who dedicated themselves to that beautiful dream? How did they experience its shimmering promise - and cope with its shattering collapse?This is the story of Guido Baracchi, the playboy and dilettante who experienced communism at its best - and its very worst. His love affair with Marxism took him from his father's astronomical observatory to the rough halls of the legendary Wobblies. He debated Bob Menzies at the University of Melbourne; he wooed novelist Katharine Susannah Prichard on a luxury ocean liner; he belonged to illegal organisations in two world wars. The Sundubbed him 'Melbourne's Lenin', and ASIO classified him 'a person of bad moral character and violent and unstable political views'.From Weimar Germany to Stalin's Russia, from Melbourne's Pentridge gaol to the bohemian colony of Montsalvat, Baracchi entwined political intrigue with a series of tempestuous romances with poets, artists and playwrights. Yet communism remained his real love and communism broke his heart - in a betrayal that still resonates in the political choices available today.… (plus d'informations)
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is a biography of the radical intellectual Guido Baracchi, a founder of the Communist Party of Australia. The book traces Baracchi's political career from his support for the Industrial Workers of the World to his association with the Trotskyist Fourth International; it also examines his turbulent personal life and his relationships with writers such as Katharine Susannah Prichard, Lesbia Harford and Betty Roland. It was shortlisted for the Colin Roderick Award.
  velvetink | Mar 31, 2013 |
This is a biography of Guido Baracchi, a well-heeled, literate bohemian and committed Marxist/Communist who lived from 1887 to 1975, described by Stuart Macintyre as 'the knight errant of Australian communism'. He's a terrific subject for biography: he worked for the cause in Weimar Germany and the 1930s Soviet Union; he had intense relationships with a number of poets and playwrights (Lesbia Harford, Katharine Susannah Prichard, Betty Roland), each of whom left rich accounts this biography has drawn on; he was widely read and wrote a lot himself, also supplying a wealth of material to his biographer. I was telling some friends about the book, and one woman was prompted to talk of her romance when young with a son of a leading Communist family: when they were about to go out on a date, he would say, 'Let's stay home tonight -- the old coms are coming around and there'll be lots of tales.' I suspect Jeff Sparrow had a background something like that, because while this book meticulously cites its written sources (discreetly up the back), and doesn't hang back from quoting T S Eliot and James Joyce to good effect, it's also bursting at the seams with 'tales', with the lore of Australian Communism: clever ploys, bastardry, romance, betrayal, nobility (like Guido's wife Neura's principled reaction to the news that he had taken up with Betty Roland, then Davies, from which she seems never to have wavered), tragedy (which may be too pallid a word for what Stalin and Stalinism did to the hopes of the world). You can almost hear the stories being told with suitable embellishment at a kitchen table far into the night.

As the story unfolds, what today is called the mainstream media comments from the margins: for example, as we follow the travails of the tiny Australian Marxist movement of the early 20s, bitterly divided within itself, devoting most of its energies to self-education, and discouraged at the prospect of ever being effective, we learn that Prime Minister Bruce gets headlines by accusing the Labor Party of pandering to Bolshevism, and thus, as Jeff Sparrow remarks, succeeds 'in elevating communism into a public issue in a way that the communists themselves found impossible'. Sadly, the MSM version has become received wisdom, and a whole dimension of our history has been largely forgotten. Those who deplore black armband history would no doubt equally deplore this, perhaps as 'red tie history'. I can't recommend it enough -- for that worthy reason, but also because it is a ripping good read, another example of history written with the verve and imaginative force that some think is the exclusive domain of the novel. ( )
  shawjonathan | May 13, 2007 |
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On 13 December 1975, Australia's sixties - that brief but inspired frenzy of political and cultural dissent - came to an end.
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'What I remember most about the communists is their passion... 'For more than seventy years, idealists and rebels of all stripes saw in the Communist Party the best hope for a world remade. Who were the people who dedicated themselves to that beautiful dream? How did they experience its shimmering promise - and cope with its shattering collapse?This is the story of Guido Baracchi, the playboy and dilettante who experienced communism at its best - and its very worst. His love affair with Marxism took him from his father's astronomical observatory to the rough halls of the legendary Wobblies. He debated Bob Menzies at the University of Melbourne; he wooed novelist Katharine Susannah Prichard on a luxury ocean liner; he belonged to illegal organisations in two world wars. The Sundubbed him 'Melbourne's Lenin', and ASIO classified him 'a person of bad moral character and violent and unstable political views'.From Weimar Germany to Stalin's Russia, from Melbourne's Pentridge gaol to the bohemian colony of Montsalvat, Baracchi entwined political intrigue with a series of tempestuous romances with poets, artists and playwrights. Yet communism remained his real love and communism broke his heart - in a betrayal that still resonates in the political choices available today.

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