Death to Fascism

ebook Louis Adamic's Fight for Democracy · Working Class in American History

By John P. Enyeart

cover image of Death to Fascism

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Born to Slovenian peasants, Louis Adamic commanded crowds, met with FDR and Truman, and built a prolific career as an author and journalist. Behind the scenes, he played a leading role in a coalition of black intellectuals and writers, working class militants, ethnic activists, and others that worked for a multiethnic America and against fascism. John Enyeart restores Adamic's life to the narrative of American history. Dogged and energetic, Adamic championed causes that ranged from ethnic and racial equality to worker's rights to anticolonialism. Adamic defied the consensus that equated being American with Anglo-Protestant culture. Instead, he insisted newcomers and their ideas kept the American identity in a state of dynamism that pushed it from strength to strength. In time, Adamic's views put him at odds with an establishment dedicated to cold war aggression and white supremacy. He increasingly fought smear campaigns and the distortion of his views—both of which continued after his probable murder in 1951.| Cover Title Copyright Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Modernism and Exile 2. Liberating "Shadow" America 3. Smrt FaĆĄizmu, Svoboda Narodu! 4. "Peace as a World Race Problem: 5. Anticommunists and Death Narratives Epilogue Notes Index Back cover |"Enyeart's work comes at a moment in which forging the multiracial, multiethnic, working-class-based, transnational antifascist movement Adamic championed is urgently necessary. . . . Death to Fascism is both praiseworthy and relevant to scholars and organizers alike." —North Median Review
"Enyeart weaves together the questions of Americanism, immigration, antifascism, and foreign policy in a coherent and engaging fashion. . . . Death to Fascism is a well-written and engaging piece of historical research." —Social History
"The objective of his book, Enyeart says, is 'recovering Adamic's legacy so that we can better understand [that] our antifascist past is vital to our future' (p. 161). His well-researched book largely achieves its objective." —Journal of Cold War Studies
|John P. Enyeart is professor and chair of the Department of History at Bucknell University. He is the author of The Quest for "Just and Pure Law": Rocky Mountain Workers and American Social Democracy, 1870–1924.
Death to Fascism