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Ethnic and Social Diversity in the Membership of the Communist Party of Poland: 1918 - 1938
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
The Communist movement in interbellum Poland was a small political entity that did not constitute a threat to the power of the state, nor did it become a visible presence since it failed to attract a majority of the working class. The movement, overall, consisted of a number of parties, organizations and groups, usually illegal, but some at times provisionally legal. The Communist Party of Poland - CPP (Komunistyczna Partia Polski - KPP) was the main party, entrusted with the guiding role by the Comintern, and also the umbrella organization and ideological reference point for the Communists throughout the twenty-year existence of the Second Polish Republic. The CPP was originally formed under the name “Communist Workers' Party of Poland” - CWPP, (Komunistyczna Partia Robotnicza Polski-KPRP). In 1920, it briefly took on the designation “Section of the Communist International” of which it was a founding member. By virtue of its name, the Party proclaimed a total proletarian orientation, ignoring the reality of an almost completely agricultural Poland at the time.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Nationalities Papers , Volume 22 , Issue S1: Special Issue - Ethnopolitics in Poland , Summer 1994 , pp. 55 - 67
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1994 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities of the USSR and Eastern Europe, Inc.
References
Notes
1. For an extensive bibliography on the CPP and on its leadership see G. Simoncini, Revolutionary Organizations and Revolutionaries in Interbellum Poland. A Bibliographical Biographical Study. Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston-New York, Queenston-Canada, Lampeter-United Kingdom, 1992, pp. xi 278. In English, the history of the CPP is outlined in: M. K. Dziewanowski, The Communist Party of Poland. An Outline of History, Harvard University Press, Cambridge Massachusetts, 1959 and 1976, pp. 55-154. And further sketched in: J. B. de Weydenthal, The Communists of Poland: An Historical Outline Revised Edition, Hoover Institution Press, Stanford, 1986, pp. 1-33. A more focused study on CPP is: G. Simoncini, The Communist Party of Poland 1918-1929, Dissertation, Columbia University, New York, 1991. See also: J. Schatz, The Generation. The Rise and Fall of the Jewish Communists of Poland. Berkeley, 1991. In Polish, the more or less orthodox Marxist literature lists: J. Kowalski, Trudne Lata. Problemy rozwoju polskiego ruchu robotniczego 1929-1935, Warszawa, 1966; J. Kowalski, Komunistyczna Partia Polski 1935-1938, Warszawa, 1975; B. Kolebacz, Komunistyczna Partia Polski 1923-1929. Problemy ideologiczne, Warszawa, 1984. Of general interest not intended for the specialist see H. Cimek and L. Kieszczyński, Komunistyczna Partia Polski 1918-1938, Warszawa, 1984. And a summary simplified sketch: A. Czubiński, Komunistyczna Partia Polski 1918-1938, Warszawa, 1985. Studies on the CPP appeared in the journal: Z pola walki, published in Moscow in the interwar period, and the homonymous Z pola walki published in Warsaw since 1958.Google Scholar
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