I belong to the working class : the unfinished autobiography of Rose Pastor Stokes

Bibliographic Information

I belong to the working class : the unfinished autobiography of Rose Pastor Stokes

edited by Herbert Shapiro and David L. Sterling

University of Georgia Press, c1992

  • : alk. paper

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Note

Includes biblographical references (p. 151-165) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

An East European Jewish immigrant, Stokes became a member of the American Socialist party, a founding member of the American Communist party, and such an outspoken critic of U.S. policies that she was convinced of seditious activities during World War I. Indeed, Stokes was one of the most deeply committed American radicals in the first decades of this century. In a lengthy introduction the editors provide a detailed outline of Stokes's life. As a young girl living in the slums of Cleveland she helped support her family with earnings from her job at a cigar factory. There, Stokes came in contact for the first time with socialism and the hope of a better and more equitable world. Eventually leaving the cigar factory for a job in New York at the "Jewish Daily News", she met and married James Graham Phelps Stokes, an outspoken Socialist and a member of a wealthy aristocratic New York family. Never comfortable with wealth and position, however, Rose remained loyal to her class and dedicated to workers' causes. Although the marriage lasted nearly 20 years, she became increasingly radical as her husband gradually returned to the safety of conventional politics. Stokes helped organize labour strikes in New York, distributed birth control information to the poor, spoke widely on behalf of the Socialist party, and worked in general to expunge what she perceived as the evils of capitalism. Late in her life, when fighting cancer, she attempted to write an autobiography that she hoped would give final meaning to her life's works for "a world in which there will be no unemployment, hunger, insecurity, or war". The manuscript was never completed, however, and has never been previously published. The work conveys Stokes's intense, passionate personality, commitment to principles, and fierce dedication to the working class.

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