John Horner and the Communist Party is a biography of a leading trade unionist and activist who became disillusioned with the Communist Party.
John Horner and the Communist Party is a biography of a leading trade unionist and activist who became disillusioned with the Communist Party.
Known for creating the modern Fire Brigades Union during the Second World War, John Horner (1911-1997) resigned from the Communist Party in 1956. Formerly one of the Partys leading members, he afterwards refused to speak or write about his communist past. Horners silence left him forgotten, but Horners daughter, Rosalind Eyben, has remedied this through her engrossing account of how and why John Horner and Pat, his wife, became communist, and the events that led them to resign from the Party. She pieces the story together from a wide range of sources, including Horners own lively unpublished memoir of his early years. The narrative occasionally diverges from the historians voice to deliver personal reflections on the author's communist childhood and on what her father told her shortly before his death about his shame and guilt for having so long denied uncomfortable truths about the Party and the Stalinist terror.
This book is for anyone concerned with the problem of political allegiance, personal morality and associated states of denial that were to haunt Horner in later life. It will also be of interest to scholars and students researching communism and the Communist Party.
Foreword by Kevin Morgan Prologue
1. Walthamstow Wide Awake!
2. A
Sense of Class
3. At Sea
4. The Lady of Shalott
5. No More War
6. The Coming
Struggle for Power
7. Marx for You and God for Me
8. Hampstead
9. Pale
Pink and Deeper Red
10. Close to Death, August-September 1939
11.
Imagination and Decision 1939-40
12. Bombed But Far From Beaten
13.
Known to Keep Strange Company 1941-43
14. The Campaign for a Second Front
15. Go to it, Housewives!
16. Dare to Make it Known
17. Sliding into the
Deep Freeze
18. The World Shall Yet Live in Peace
19. The Childrens
Perspective
20. Both Betrayed and Betrayer
21. Exit Epilogue: Uncomfortable
Encounters with Truth
Rosalind Eyben is a historian, social anthropologist, and Emeritus Professorial Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, UK. Following a career in international development policy and practice that included working in many parts of Africa and later in India and Latin America, she became Chief Social Development Advisor at the UK Governments Department for International Development, a role that she left to research and teach about power and relations in the international aid system. Among her previous books are International Aid and the Making of a Better World (2014) and, with Laura Turquet, Feminists in Development Organizations: Change from the Margins (2013).