Red Lives: Our Years in the US Communist Party, Vol. 2: The Long 1960s

Red Lives: Our Years in the US Communist Party (1950–2000) is the first collection of historical analyses and reminiscences by members of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) and the Communist youth movement in the US from the 1950s through the 1990s. The nearly fifty first-person testimonies bring to life a missing chapter in the history of US radicalism and demonstrate the influence of the post-World War II generation of Communists on social justice movements.

Volume 2, The Long 1960s, turns its attention to the youth activists in the anti–Vietnam War and antimilitary movements and their experiences in struggles for civil rights and racial equality. The Communist Party USA played an important role in the earliest sit-ins and boycotts against segregation going back to the 1930s, in the 1950s battles against Jim Crow, and in the struggles for civil rights and equality in the 1960s and after. Contributors to this volume belonged to and helped lead neighborhood, state, union, school, and national peace organizations, especially in the movement against the war in Vietnam, but also in solidarity with anticolonial and antiracist independence movements. They established youth organizations premised on the right of young people to work, go to school, and live in peace.

The work of Communist activists in this volume holds unique significance. Communists were “proto”-Black Lives Matter supporters, for example. They joined and helped lead the struggle for international solidarity with anticolonial and antiapartheid movements across the globe. Common to all was the belief that mass activity and mass movements were key, that socially progressive goals could not be met by acting solo, and that international alliances around shared civil and labor rights missions was essential. During a time of growing mass movements for civil and labor rights, and international solidarity, these Communist youth activists were always at the forefront.