Communism in IndiaUniversity of California Press, 1940 - Communism |
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
THE DUAL ENVIRONMENT OF THE CPI | 7 |
INDIANS JOIN THE COMINTERN | 19 |
PART 2 | 35 |
COMMUNIST ATTEMPTS TO CAPTURE THE NATIONALIST MOVEMENT | 44 |
ORGANIZING THE VANGUARD | 59 |
THE IMPERIALISM OF THE CPGB | 82 |
THE COMINTERN CHANGES COURSE | 101 |
THE CONSEQUENCES OF ADVENTURISM | 276 |
THE RETURN TO CONSTITUTIONAL COMMUNISM | 309 |
STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION | 335 |
THE MASS ORGANIZATIONS | 366 |
FRONTS AND FELLOW TRAVELERS | 406 |
THE AGITPROP INSTRUMENT | 446 |
THE PARLIAMENTARY ARENA | 466 |
THE NATIONALITY QUESTION AND NATIONAL UNITY | 487 |
Common terms and phrases
action activity Adhikari AITUC Ajoy Ghosh All-India Andhra anti-imperialist appears B. T. Ranadive Bengal Bombay bourgeois bourgeoisie Calcutta Central Committee Chandra China Chinese colonial Cominform Comintern Communist International Communist movement Communist Party comrades conference coöperation CPGB CPI Central CPI's declared delegates Delhi democratic document Dyakov ECCI elected front Gandhi Gandhism Ibid imperialism imperialist independence Indian Communists Indian National Congress Inprecor international Communist Kisan Kuomintang labor Labour Monthly leaders leadership League leftist letter M. N. Roy Madras manifesto mass Meerut ment Moscow munist Muslim nationalist Nehru government organization P. C. Joshi Palme Dutt Party of India Party's peace peasant People's Publishing House petty bourgeoisie Politbureau proletariat provincial question Ranadive revolution revolutionary Roy's Russian S. A. Dange Sabha secretary session Soviet Union Spratt Stalin statement strategy struggle tactics Tagore Telengana tion Trade Union unity Usmani workers Zhukov