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[[Category:American communists]]
[[Category:Revolution theorists]]
[[Category:African American writers]]
[[Category:1910 births]]
[[Category:1910 births]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:African American writers]]
[[Category:African Americans' civil rights activists]]
[[Category:American communists]]
[[Category:American Marxists]]
[[Category:American socialists]]
[[Category:American writers]]
[[Category:Marxist writers]]
[[Category:People from Chicago, Illinois]]
[[Category:People from Chicago, Illinois]]
[[Category:Revolution theorists]]


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Revision as of 08:53, 25 February 2009

Lightfoot in 1955

Claude M. Lightfoot (1910-1986) was an African-American activist and author. In 1955, during the McCarthy era, he was indicted based on the Smith Act and put on trial. While previous Smith Act indictments had been of individuals accused directly of attempting to overthrow the US government by force or violence, Lightfoot was indicted merely for being a member of the Communist Party, which, in turn, was alleged to be attempting to overthrow the government. Having moved to Chicago's South Side in 1917, Lightfoot joined the stuggles of Black workers in the 1920s. In 1932 he ran for the Illinois State Legislature on the Communist ticket, receiving 33,000 votes. After three and a half years of service in World War II, he rose to the top leadership of the Illinois Communist Party. His autobiography, also his thesis at the University of Illinois, is: "From Chicago's ghetto to world politics : the life and struggles of Claude M. Lightfoot," 469 leaves. It was first published as Black America and the World Revolution (New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1970), 94pp. A later augmented edition was titled Chicago Slums to World Politics, 226 pages.

Major publications

  • An American looks at Russia: Can we live together in peace? (New York : New Century Publishers, 1951), 23 pp.
  • The Negro Question in the U.S.A. (New York: New Century Publishers, 1960).
  • Turning point in Freedom Road: The fight to end Jim Crow now (New York: New Century Publishers, 1962), 46 pp.
  • Black power and liberation: A communist view (New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1967), 46 pp.
  • Ghetto rebellion to black liberation (New York, International Publishers, 1968), 192 pp.
  • The Civil War and black liberation today (New York : New Outlook Publishers, 1969), 45 p.
  • Racism and human survival: Lessons of Nazi Germany for today's world (New York, International Publishers, 1972), 287 pp. illus.
  • The effect of education on racism; the two German states and the USA (New York, New Outlook, 1973).
  • Human rights U.S. style: From colonial times through the New Deal (New York: International Publishers, 1977), 229 pages.
  • Salute to Black history honoring Dr. Claude Lightfoot (Salsedo Press, Chicago: 1979), pamphlet.

References

  • The Case of Claude Lightfoot, issued by the Lightfoot Defense committee, Chicago, Illinois, 1955.

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