Class Cohesion versus Spurious Patriotism

A Straight Talk to British Workers

Publication Details
Range:
Number: 1
Edition: 2015
ISBN: 978-1-911522-37-9
Number of pages: 24
Format: Stapled Pamphlet
Page Details
Section: BRHG Publications
Projects: Bristol’s WWI Conscientious Objectors
Subjects: Workers Organisations & Strikes, World War I
Posted: Modified:

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With a new afterword by Kevin Morgan.

A 2015 reprint of a 1915 pamphlet, originally published at the height of reaction during World War One. Proposing class struggle and international solidarity in response to nationalism and war, it’s a unique voice of dissent within the British labour movement of the time. Only a few copies of the original pamphlet exist; there is no copy in the British Library, and even the well-known libraries of labour movement history do not usually have a copy. This facsimile reprint will ensure the continued, and enhanced, circulation of an important work of radical trade union history.

The author, Fred Bramley, a Trade Union organiser from West Yorkshire, later became TUC assistant secretary in 1917 and then general secretary in 1923 until his untimely death in 1925.

Socialists of France, Germany, and Great Britain have, with a few honourable exceptions, made an effort to sacrifice class cohesion and Internationalism on the altar of ‘Nationalism’.

FRED BRAMLEY

Reviews

Bristol Radical Pamphleteer has published more than 30 original works since 2008. With this pamphlet, Bristol Radical History Group is starting a second strand of publishing: reprints of hidden, forgotten, hard-to-find, suppressed or marginalised publications.

Class Cohesion versus Spurious Patriotism has been republished in association with the Socialist History Society, www.socialisthistorysociety.co.uk

2 Comments

  1. Hi, that looks like a fascinating pamphlet. I have been looking online for primary sources like that for a Lang & Lit class I am teaching, and not found much yet. Is this, or something like it, available digitally? I am in Japan at the moment, so physical copies are a bit complicated. Thanks.

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