Revision as of 20:26, 23 December 2024 editThe-dansker (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users1,148 edits Initial implementation. More "Career" details are needed in order to remove the "stub" designation.Tag: Disambiguation links added | Latest revision as of 06:42, 2 January 2025 edit undoSer Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators6,276,403 edits Removing from Category:American communists using Cat-a-lot | ||
(18 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
| alt = | | alt = | ||
| caption = | | caption = | ||
| birth_name = | | birth_name = Jacob Soifer | ||
| birth_date = May 25, 1904 <!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} --> | | birth_date = May 25, 1904 <!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} --> | ||
| birth_place = ], ] | | birth_place = ], ] | ||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
| employer = '']'', '']'' | | employer = '']'', '']'' | ||
| organization = | | organization = | ||
| known_for = |
| known_for = Editor of '']'' magazine | ||
| notable_works = ''New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties'' | | notable_works = ''New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties'' | ||
| spouse={{marriage|Helen Oken|1931|1957|end=div}}<br>{{marriage|Augusta Strong|1963}} | | spouse={{marriage|Helen Oken|1931|1957|end=div}}<br>{{marriage|Augusta Strong|1963}} | ||
| children = 3: Daniel, Susan and Nora | | children = 3: Daniel, Susan and Nora | ||
| parents = |
| parents = Jesse Soifer, Beila Yasnitz | ||
| relatives = ] | | relatives = ] | ||
| awards = | | awards = | ||
| footnotes = | | footnotes = | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Joseph North''' (1904–1976) was an American journalist, author and ] editor. He is best remembered as |
'''Joseph North''' (1904–1976) was an American journalist, author and ] editor. He is best remembered as a longtime editor of '']'', a literary and artistic magazine closely associated with the ] (CPUSA). He was also a columnist and correspondent for '']'' for many decades. In the latter role, he covered key 20th century events, including the ], ], ], ], and ]. | ||
==Early years== | ==Early years== | ||
Joseph North was born Jacob Soifer on May 25, 1904 to Jewish parents |
Joseph North was born Jacob Soifer on May 25, 1904, to Jewish parents Jesse Soifer and Beila (Bessie) Yasnitz. His birthplace was ], which was then part of the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.geni.com/people/Joseph-North/6000000142987636821 |publisher=] |title=Joseph North (Soifer) (1904 – 1976) |date=16 August 2024}}</ref> When Jacob was nine months old, the Soifer family immigrated to the United States and settled in ].<ref name=NYTimes_obit>{{cite news |title=Joseph North Dies; Communist Editor |date=22 December 1976 |newspaper=] |page=32 |last=Flint |first=Peter B. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/12/22/archives/joseph-north-dies-communist-editor-excorrespondent-for-worker-was.html}}</ref> | ||
Jesse was a blacksmith and skilled mechanic, and Bessie ran a small grocery store.<ref>{{cite book |last=North |first=Joseph |title=No Men Are Strangers |publisher=] |year=1958 |pages=10–11}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Henderson |first=Sanya Shoilevska |title=Alex North, Film Composer |publisher=McFarland |year=2009 |isbn=978-0786443338 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JH3ajCxpfSUC&pg=PA10 |page=10}}</ref> In 1915, Jesse died on the operating table during ] surgery (the family later learned it was a botched operation).{{sfn|Henderson|2009|p=10}} To help his mother make ends meet, Jacob began working in a textile mill at age 12, and he worked summers in the local Chester shipyards.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.peoplesworld.org/authors/joseph-north/ |title=Joseph North |date=27 July 2024 |newspaper=]}}</ref> He meanwhile continued his education and graduated with a ] from the ].<ref name=Joseph_North_papers>{{Cite web |url=https://findingaids.library.nyu.edu/tamwag/tam_605/ |title=Guide to the Joseph North and Helen Oken North Family Papers |id=TAM.605 |editor-last=Mulliner |editor-first=Heather |publisher=NYU Special Collections Finding Aids |via=Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives |date=March 2017}}</ref> | |||
==Career== | ==Career== | ||
Following graduation, and with an interest in writing and journalism, Jacob landed a series of cub reporter jobs on Pennsylvania newspapers |
Following graduation, and with an interest in writing and journalism, Jacob Soifer landed a series of cub reporter jobs on Pennsylvania newspapers such as ''The Chester Times''.<ref name=NYTimes_obit/> On ] 1929, while reporting on a free speech demonstration organized by the ] (ILD) in ], he was clubbed by police and thrown in jail. His cellmate was a Communist who influenced Soifer's thinking.{{sfn|North|1958|pp=58–63}} When he got out of jail, Soifer volunteered at the ] office of the ILD.{{sfn|North|1958|pp=64–65}} He also began writing articles for ''Labor Defense'', the ILD's monthly magazine, and for ''Labor Unity'', the publication of the ].{{sfn|North|1958|p=82}} He joined the ] at this time.<ref name=NYTimes_obit/> Later in 1929, he accepted a job in the publicity office of the national ILD headquarters in New York.{{sfn|North|1958|pp=64–65}} Because of the labor organization's Communist reputation, and to protect his family from potential harassment, Soifer started signing his articles using the ] "Joe North" or "Joseph North".{{sfn|Henderson|2009|pp=12–13}} Soon the rest of the family followed suit and adopted the "North" surname, including his younger brother who would become the famed film composer ].{{sfn|Henderson|2009|pp=12–13}} | ||
In 1932–33, North was made co-editor of ''Labor Defense''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Labor Defender: Journal of the International Labor Defense |via=Marxists Internet Archive |url=https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/labordefender/ |date=21 April 2016}}</ref> Throughout much of the 1930s, he was involved with the '']'' magazine. He contributed articles and served on its editorial staff in 1934–35.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=''New Masses'' Editors |url=https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/new-masses/1934/v10n01-jan-02-1934-NM.pdf |date=2 January 1934 |magazine=New Masses |volume=10 |number=1 |page=5 |via=Marxists Internet Archive}}</ref> After a hiatus for the ], he returned in 1939 as ''New Masses'' editor, a position he held until 1948.<ref name=Congress_report>{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uS0WAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA1235 |title=Communist Training Operations |publisher=United States Congress House Un-American Activities |page=1003 |date=1959}} This Congressional report lists North as ''New Masses'' editor from 1939–1948.</ref> During his tenure at the magazine, and in his travels and reporting as a foreign correspondent, North came in contact with many notable writers and artists. His 1958 memoir, ''No Men Are Strangers'', describes encounters he had with people such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. But North's steadfast allegiance to CPUSA doctrine sometimes caused friction with his acquaintances.<ref>{{cite book |last=Wolff |first=Milton |author-link=Milton Wolff |title=Another Hill |year=1994 |page=382 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn=978-0252020919}} In this work of historical fiction about the Spanish Civil War, Wolff cites ] of the ] who toured the front-lines with North. Sheean found North's reporting of the conflict to be heavily biased in favor of the CPUSA position, which was to undercount ] casualties and otherwise downplay how disastrously things were going for the anti-fascist side.</ref> ] wrote about North:{{blockquote| was to become, in the years ahead, one of my closest friends. He was a big, shaggy bear of a man, always unkempt even when he dressed with the greatest care, goodhearted, good-natured. He reminded me of ] in the ] tales, a man without rancor or hostility, a man I loved and who became like a brother to me. With all that, he had given himself to orthodoxy, and that is a terrible curse{{Snd}}in a Communist Party or a religion or in politics or in any system of thinking.<ref>{{cite book |title=Being Red |last=Fast |first=Howard |author-link=Howard Fast |location=Boston |publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company |year=1990 |isbn=0-395-55130-7}}</ref>}} | |||
⚫ | |||
In a similar vein, North recounted an incident in the Spanish Civil War when he and Hemingway were holed up together in a room in ] during an artillery barrage from a ] battery:{{blockquote|After the third drink, he began to laud the ], their courage about which he had frequently written. And then, eyeing me, he said suddenly, "I like Communists when they're soldiers: when they're priests, I hate them." "Priests?" I repeated, startled. "Yes, priests, the ] who hand down the papal bulls," he glared. I reminded him that he once confessed he had never read a word of ], or ever truly knew a Communist. "That air of authority your leaders wear, like cassocks," he insisted. Evidently one drink too many roused his belligerency.{{sfn|North|1958|p=170}}}} | |||
Next, Hemingway started ] around the room. After several minutes, he toweled off his sweat: "I keep trim that way," he laughed, "to fight the commissars. I suppose you stay fit memorizing a chapter of '']''."{{sfn|North|1958|p=171}} Despite these barbs, Hemingway wrote a complimentary Foreword to North's 1939 pamphlet, ''Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain''.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000270349 |title=Catalog Record: Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain |date=1939 |publisher=HathiTrust Digital Library}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | In his decades as a '']'' columnist, North developed a writing style that mixed humor with serious commentary. For example, during the ] in ], he wrote a piece entitled "That Sprinter, Hitler". It opens with wry remarks about ]'s hurried exits from the track stadium whenever an African-American athlete such as ] won a ]:{{blockquote|It's not, I admit, on the best of authority, but I hear that Hitler will be asked to compete in the Olympics—in the 100-meter sprints. His dashes out of the stadium when the Negro athletes stride in with championships have been noticed all over the world. The Fuhrer's fast. Jesse Owens romps in with another championship, and presto! Hitler spurts the other way. They say the dictator can do the 100-meter dash in close to nothing flat whenever a Negro crosses the line.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/daily-worker-1936-black-athletes-embarrass-hitler-at-nazi-olympics/ |title=Daily Worker 1936: Black athletes embarrass Hitler at Nazi Olympics |date=26 July 2024 |newspaper=]}}</ref>}} | ||
For several years starting in the late 1940s, North lectured at the ],<ref name=Congress_report/> which was included on the ]. During the ] of the 1950s, North became a target of investigation by the ]. On 3 May 1956, he was compelled to testify before the ]. He invoked the ] and refused to answer questions pertaining to his CPUSA membership, or his alleged contacts with Soviet intelligence in ].<ref name=Congress_report/> | |||
North reported on the ] and its aftermath for ''The Daily Worker''. While in Cuba in April 1961, he accompanied Prime Minister ]'s forces when they repelled the U.S.-backed ].<ref name=NYTimes_obit/> In 1969, North edited the book ''New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties'', which collected representative ''New Masses'' writings from 1934 through 1940.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Peck |first=David R. |title=Review of ''New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties'' |journal=American Radical History |volume=34 |number=4 |date=Winter 1970 |pages=490–492 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40401525 |jstor=40401525 |url-access=limited}}</ref> | |||
==Personal life and death== | ==Personal life and death== | ||
North married Helen Oken in 1931. During |
North married Helen Oken in 1931. During the last four of his sixteen months covering the Spanish Civil War, she was in Spain also, working in the medical service.{{sfn|North|1958|p=173}} After the war, they settled in ] and raised three children: Daniel, Susan, and Nora. Like her husband, Helen was active in the CPUSA. On numerous occasions, she had to assume the breadwinner role since Joseph's job as a journalist did not provide enough income to support the family, and he was often abroad on assignments.<ref name=Joseph_North_papers/> She and Joseph divorced in 1957. He remarried in 1963 to Augusta Strong, a ''Daily Worker'' reporter and editor. They remained married until her death in the summer of 1976.<ref name=Joseph_North_papers/> | ||
Joseph North died of ] on December 20, 1976 at a hospital in ] while on a visit to the island. He was 72 |
Joseph North died of ] on December 20, 1976, at a hospital in ] while on a visit to the island. He was 72.<ref name="NYTimes_obit"/> | ||
==Works== | ==Works== | ||
Many of North's published works were short pamphlet-style writings and not full-length books:<ref>{{cite web |url=https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=North%2C%20Joseph |title=Online Books by Joseph North |publisher=The Online Books Page}}</ref> | Many of North's published works were short pamphlet-style writings and not full-length books:<ref>{{cite web |url=https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=North%2C%20Joseph |title=Online Books by Joseph North |editor-last=Ockerbloom |editor-first=John Mark |publisher=The Online Books Page}}</ref> | ||
* {{cite book |title=Lynching Negro children in southern courts (the Scottsboro case) |location=New York |publisher=International Labor Defense |year=1931 |lccn=97129268 |url=https://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/lynchingnegrochildren.pdf}} | * {{cite book |title=Lynching Negro children in southern courts (the Scottsboro case) |location=New York |publisher=International Labor Defense |year=1931 |lccn=97129268 |url=https://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/lynchingnegrochildren.pdf}} | ||
⚫ | * {{cite book |title=Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain |location=New York |publisher=Friends of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade |year=1939}} | ||
⚫ | * {{cite book |title=Why Spain can win |location=New York |publisher=Workers Library Publishers |year=1939 |url=https://archive.org/details/WhySpainCanWin/mode/2up}} | ||
* ''Proletarian Literature in the United States: An Anthology''. (Contributor and co-editor.) New York: International Publishers, 1935. | * ''Proletarian Literature in the United States: An Anthology''. (Contributor and co-editor.) New York: International Publishers, 1935. | ||
⚫ | * {{cite book |title=Why Spain can win |location=New York |publisher=Workers Library Publishers |year=1939 |url=https://archive.org/details/WhySpainCanWin/mode/2up}} | ||
⚫ | * {{cite book |title=Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain |location=New York |publisher=Friends of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade |year=1939}} | ||
* {{cite book |title=The case of ]: why he should be freed |location=New York |publisher=Citizen's Committee to Free Earl Browder |year=1942}} | * {{cite book |title=The case of ]: why he should be freed |location=New York |publisher=Citizen's Committee to Free Earl Browder |year=1942}} | ||
* {{cite book |title=Washington and Lincoln: The American tradition |location=New York |publisher=Workers Library Publishers |year=1942}} | * {{cite book |title=Washington and Lincoln: The American tradition |location=New York |publisher=Workers Library Publishers |year=1942}} | ||
Line 71: | Line 81: | ||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
* Wald, Alan M. ''Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth-Century Literary Left |
* Wald, Alan M. ''Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth-Century Literary Left''. Durham: University of North Carolina Press, 2001. | ||
* Wald, Alan M. ''Trinity of Passion: The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade''. Durham: University of North Carolina Press, 2007. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* : Complete ''New Masses'' digital archive ( |
* : Complete ''New Masses'' digital archive (1926–1948) on Marxists Internet Archive, in partnership with the Riazanov Library | ||
{{Authority control}} | {{Authority control}} | ||
Line 81: | Line 92: | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
Line 93: | Line 103: | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
{{US-bio-stub}} |
Latest revision as of 06:42, 2 January 2025
American journalist and editor (1904–1976) This article is about American radical journalist, author and magazine editor. For other uses, see Joseph North (disambiguation).Joseph North | |
---|---|
Born | Jacob Soifer May 25, 1904 Odessa, Russian Empire |
Died | December 20, 1976(1976-12-20) (aged 72) San Juan, Puerto Rico |
Citizenship | American |
Education | University of Pennsylvania |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, editor, author |
Years active | 1928–1975 |
Employer(s) | New Masses, The Daily Worker |
Known for | Editor of New Masses magazine |
Notable work | New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties |
Spouse(s) |
Helen Oken
(m. 1931; div. 1957) Augusta Strong (m. 1963) |
Children | 3: Daniel, Susan and Nora |
Parent(s) | Jesse Soifer, Beila Yasnitz |
Relatives | Alex North |
Joseph North (1904–1976) was an American journalist, author and magazine editor. He is best remembered as a longtime editor of New Masses, a literary and artistic magazine closely associated with the Communist Party USA (CPUSA). He was also a columnist and correspondent for The Daily Worker for many decades. In the latter role, he covered key 20th century events, including the Spanish Civil War, World War II, Civil Rights movement, Cuban Revolution, and Vietnam War.
Early years
Joseph North was born Jacob Soifer on May 25, 1904, to Jewish parents Jesse Soifer and Beila (Bessie) Yasnitz. His birthplace was Odessa, which was then part of the Russian Empire. When Jacob was nine months old, the Soifer family immigrated to the United States and settled in Chester, Pennsylvania.
Jesse was a blacksmith and skilled mechanic, and Bessie ran a small grocery store. In 1915, Jesse died on the operating table during appendicitis surgery (the family later learned it was a botched operation). To help his mother make ends meet, Jacob began working in a textile mill at age 12, and he worked summers in the local Chester shipyards. He meanwhile continued his education and graduated with a BA from the University of Pennsylvania.
Career
Following graduation, and with an interest in writing and journalism, Jacob Soifer landed a series of cub reporter jobs on Pennsylvania newspapers such as The Chester Times. On May Day 1929, while reporting on a free speech demonstration organized by the International Labor Defense (ILD) in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, he was clubbed by police and thrown in jail. His cellmate was a Communist who influenced Soifer's thinking. When he got out of jail, Soifer volunteered at the Philadelphia office of the ILD. He also began writing articles for Labor Defense, the ILD's monthly magazine, and for Labor Unity, the publication of the Trade Union Educational League. He joined the CPUSA at this time. Later in 1929, he accepted a job in the publicity office of the national ILD headquarters in New York. Because of the labor organization's Communist reputation, and to protect his family from potential harassment, Soifer started signing his articles using the pseudonym "Joe North" or "Joseph North". Soon the rest of the family followed suit and adopted the "North" surname, including his younger brother who would become the famed film composer Alex North.
In 1932–33, North was made co-editor of Labor Defense. Throughout much of the 1930s, he was involved with the New Masses magazine. He contributed articles and served on its editorial staff in 1934–35. After a hiatus for the Spanish Civil War, he returned in 1939 as New Masses editor, a position he held until 1948. During his tenure at the magazine, and in his travels and reporting as a foreign correspondent, North came in contact with many notable writers and artists. His 1958 memoir, No Men Are Strangers, describes encounters he had with people such as Theodore Dreiser, Lincoln Steffens, Edmund Wilson, Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe, Dorothy Parker, Louis Aragon, and Charlie Chaplin. But North's steadfast allegiance to CPUSA doctrine sometimes caused friction with his acquaintances. Howard Fast wrote about North:
was to become, in the years ahead, one of my closest friends. He was a big, shaggy bear of a man, always unkempt even when he dressed with the greatest care, goodhearted, good-natured. He reminded me of Friar Tuck in the Robin Hood tales, a man without rancor or hostility, a man I loved and who became like a brother to me. With all that, he had given himself to orthodoxy, and that is a terrible curse – in a Communist Party or a religion or in politics or in any system of thinking.
In a similar vein, North recounted an incident in the Spanish Civil War when he and Hemingway were holed up together in a room in Madrid during an artillery barrage from a Nazi battery:
After the third drink, he began to laud the Lincoln Brigade, their courage about which he had frequently written. And then, eyeing me, he said suddenly, "I like Communists when they're soldiers: when they're priests, I hate them." "Priests?" I repeated, startled. "Yes, priests, the commissars who hand down the papal bulls," he glared. I reminded him that he once confessed he had never read a word of Marx, or ever truly knew a Communist. "That air of authority your leaders wear, like cassocks," he insisted. Evidently one drink too many roused his belligerency.
Next, Hemingway started shadowboxing around the room. After several minutes, he toweled off his sweat: "I keep trim that way," he laughed, "to fight the commissars. I suppose you stay fit memorizing a chapter of Das Kapital." Despite these barbs, Hemingway wrote a complimentary Foreword to North's 1939 pamphlet, Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain.
In his decades as a Daily Worker columnist, North developed a writing style that mixed humor with serious commentary. For example, during the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, he wrote a piece entitled "That Sprinter, Hitler". It opens with wry remarks about Hitler's hurried exits from the track stadium whenever an African-American athlete such as Jesse Owens won a medal:
It's not, I admit, on the best of authority, but I hear that Hitler will be asked to compete in the Olympics—in the 100-meter sprints. His dashes out of the stadium when the Negro athletes stride in with championships have been noticed all over the world. The Fuhrer's fast. Jesse Owens romps in with another championship, and presto! Hitler spurts the other way. They say the dictator can do the 100-meter dash in close to nothing flat whenever a Negro crosses the line.
For several years starting in the late 1940s, North lectured at the Jefferson School of Social Science, which was included on the Attorney General's List of Subversive Organizations. During the Second Red Scare of the 1950s, North became a target of investigation by the United States Congress. On 3 May 1956, he was compelled to testify before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. He invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer questions pertaining to his CPUSA membership, or his alleged contacts with Soviet intelligence in World War II.
North reported on the Cuban Revolution and its aftermath for The Daily Worker. While in Cuba in April 1961, he accompanied Prime Minister Fidel Castro's forces when they repelled the U.S.-backed Bay of Pigs Invasion. In 1969, North edited the book New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties, which collected representative New Masses writings from 1934 through 1940.
Personal life and death
North married Helen Oken in 1931. During the last four of his sixteen months covering the Spanish Civil War, she was in Spain also, working in the medical service. After the war, they settled in Manhattan and raised three children: Daniel, Susan, and Nora. Like her husband, Helen was active in the CPUSA. On numerous occasions, she had to assume the breadwinner role since Joseph's job as a journalist did not provide enough income to support the family, and he was often abroad on assignments. She and Joseph divorced in 1957. He remarried in 1963 to Augusta Strong, a Daily Worker reporter and editor. They remained married until her death in the summer of 1976.
Joseph North died of leukemia on December 20, 1976, at a hospital in San Juan, Puerto Rico while on a visit to the island. He was 72.
Works
Many of North's published works were short pamphlet-style writings and not full-length books:
- Lynching Negro children in southern courts (the Scottsboro case) (PDF). New York: International Labor Defense. 1931. LCCN 97129268.
- Proletarian Literature in the United States: An Anthology. (Contributor and co-editor.) New York: International Publishers, 1935.
- Why Spain can win. New York: Workers Library Publishers. 1939.
- Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain. New York: Friends of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. 1939.
- The case of Earl Browder: why he should be freed. New York: Citizen's Committee to Free Earl Browder. 1942.
- Washington and Lincoln: The American tradition. New York: Workers Library Publishers. 1942.
- What are we doing in China?. New York: New Century Publishers. 1945.
- Verdict against freedom; your stake in the Communist trial. New York: New Century Publishers. 1949.
- Behind the Florida bombings; who killed NAACP leader Harry T. Moore and his wife?. New York: New Century Publishers. 1952.
- Robert Minor: Artist and Crusader. New York: International Publishers. 1956. ASIN B000YB9KMO.
- No Men Are Strangers. New York: International Publishers. 1958. ASIN B0007DREAY.
- Cuba's revolution: I saw the people's victory. New York: New Century Publishers. 1959.
- Cuba: Hope of a Hemisphere. New York: International Publishers. 1961. ASIN B0007EIYDE.
- New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties. New York: International Publishers. 1969. ASIN B000MXQX5Q.
References
- "Joseph North (Soifer) (1904 – 1976)". Geni.com. 16 August 2024.
- ^ Flint, Peter B. (22 December 1976). "Joseph North Dies; Communist Editor". The New York Times. p. 32.
- North, Joseph (1958). No Men Are Strangers. International Publishers. pp. 10–11.
- Henderson, Sanya Shoilevska (2009). Alex North, Film Composer. McFarland. p. 10. ISBN 978-0786443338.
- Henderson 2009, p. 10.
- "Joseph North". People's World. 27 July 2024.
- ^ Mulliner, Heather, ed. (March 2017). "Guide to the Joseph North and Helen Oken North Family Papers". NYU Special Collections Finding Aids. TAM.605 – via Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives.
- North 1958, pp. 58–63.
- ^ North 1958, pp. 64–65.
- North 1958, p. 82.
- ^ Henderson 2009, pp. 12–13.
- "Labor Defender: Journal of the International Labor Defense". 21 April 2016 – via Marxists Internet Archive.
- "New Masses Editors" (PDF). New Masses. Vol. 10, no. 1. 2 January 1934. p. 5 – via Marxists Internet Archive.
- ^ "Communist Training Operations". United States Congress House Un-American Activities. 1959. p. 1003. This Congressional report lists North as New Masses editor from 1939–1948.
- Wolff, Milton (1994). Another Hill. University of Illinois Press. p. 382. ISBN 978-0252020919. In this work of historical fiction about the Spanish Civil War, Wolff cites Vincent Sheean of the New York Herald Tribune who toured the front-lines with North. Sheean found North's reporting of the conflict to be heavily biased in favor of the CPUSA position, which was to undercount Spanish Republican casualties and otherwise downplay how disastrously things were going for the anti-fascist side.
- Fast, Howard (1990). Being Red. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-395-55130-7.
- North 1958, p. 170.
- North 1958, p. 171.
- Catalog Record: Men in the ranks, the story of 12 Americans in Spain. HathiTrust Digital Library. 1939.
- "Daily Worker 1936: Black athletes embarrass Hitler at Nazi Olympics". People's World. 26 July 2024.
- Peck, David R. (Winter 1970). "Review of New Masses: An Anthology of the Rebel Thirties". American Radical History. 34 (4): 490–492. JSTOR 40401525.
- North 1958, p. 173.
- Ockerbloom, John Mark (ed.). "Online Books by Joseph North". The Online Books Page.
Further reading
- Wald, Alan M. Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth-Century Literary Left. Durham: University of North Carolina Press, 2001.
- Wald, Alan M. Trinity of Passion: The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade. Durham: University of North Carolina Press, 2007.
External links
- Marxists.org: Complete New Masses digital archive (1926–1948) on Marxists Internet Archive, in partnership with the Riazanov Library
- 1904 births
- 1976 deaths
- American male journalists
- American male non-fiction writers
- American Marxists
- American people of Russian-Jewish descent
- University of Pennsylvania alumni
- Emigrants from the Russian Empire to the United States
- Jewish American journalists
- Jewish American non-fiction writers
- Jewish socialists
- Members of the Communist Party USA
- Jewish Ukrainian writers