Canadian reds : the Young Communist League of Canada, international communism and the Soviet experience (1917-1939)
Type de ressource
Thèse
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Pankratova Dyakonova, Daria (Auteur)
- Carley, Michael Jabara (Collaborateur)
- Rouillard, Jacques (Collaborateur)
Titre
Canadian reds : the Young Communist League of Canada, international communism and the Soviet experience (1917-1939)
Résumé
The dissertation represents the first attempt to construct a narrative about the Young Communist League of Canada (founded in 1923) during the inter-war period, so far absent in existing research on Canadian communism or socialism. The thesis focuses on the evolution of the relationship between the Young Communist League (YCL) and the Communist International and Young Communist International where Soviet Communists played a predominant role. It sheds light on numerous minor and major changes of policy shaped by the national and international contexts in which these organisations had to act. The dissertation argues that despite genuine enthusiasm toward the International’s line and the Soviet experience, Young Canadian Communists often found it difficult to implement the International’s directives in Canada. Neither the International nor the communist movement in Canada was monolithic. On the contrary, there appear to have been numerous conflicts on three levels: between the International and the League; between the League and the Communist Party of Canada; and between local or linguistic groups in the League and its national leadership. The state repression of the left during the whole inter-war period, derisory level of funding and membership numbers also impeded the implementation of the International’s policies. At the same time, the International’s weaker levels of control allowed for a certain degree of flexibility and autonomy in the Canadian League’s policies. Following the position of the Young Communist International, the Canadian communist youth placed special emphasis on anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist, and later anti-fascist and anti-Nazi, militancy. However, the League appeared to have acted independently as far as immediate demands of the youth and cultural policies were concerned, especially during the Great Depression era. The League engaged in joint activism with other youth organisations, even when Moscow did not encourage such strategy. The initiatives often came from local grassroots organizers, although Canadian authorities were convinced that Moscow was behind each and every action of the League. In the 1930s in particular the YCL, through a network of social and cultural organisations, gained access to youth of different political orientations – the socialist left, centre-left and even “bourgeois forces.” The YCL’s impact and outreach were further increased by the fact that the organisation’s sympathizers, if not members, belonged to diverse social backgrounds and included not only young workers and farmers but also High School and University students, artists, sportsmen, young white collars, many of them belonging to religious youth groups. For these young people, the YCL was the place that provided Marxist solutions to burning questions of the time such as youth unemployment and absence of welfare, social injustice, growth of fascism and imperialism in Canada and abroad.
Type
Thèse de doctorat (Ph.D.)
Université
Université de Montréal
Lieu
Montréal
Date
2020-12-16
Langue
Anglais
Référence
Pankratova Dyakonova, Daria. « Canadian reds : the Young Communist League of Canada, international communism and the Soviet experience (1917-1939) ». Thèse de doctorat (Ph.D.), Université de Montréal, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/1866/24795.
Années
Thèses et mémoires
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