Table of Contents
Volume 1: Owenism
Edited by Ophélie Siméon
Part 1. Work as it was and how it might be
Robert Owen, "Address Prefixed to the Third Essay - ‘To the
Superintendents of Manufactories’", in A New View of Society, IV,
(London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, [1814]
1816), 71-77.
House of Commons, "Evidence of Robert Owen on his New Lanark
Experiment", in Report of the Select Committee on the State of
Children employed in Manufactories, 1816, pp. 20-8; 36-40;
86-95.
Robert Owen, "Letter, dated July 25 and 16, 1817, containing a
Further Development of the Plan contained in the Report to the
Committee of the Association for the Relief of the Manufacturing
and Labouring Poor, with Answers and Objections" (1817), in A
Supplementary Appendix to the First Volume of The Life of Robert
Owen, Containing a Series of Reports, Addresses, Memorials, and
Other Documents, Referred to in That Volume. 1803-1820, (London:
Effingham Wilson 1858) Appendix I.2, 65-78.
Philanthropos [John Minter Morgan], Remarks on the
Practicability of Mr. Robert Owen's Plan to Improve the Condition
of the Lower Classes (London: S. Leigh, 1819), 25-28.
George Mudie, "On the Causes of the Distress Prevalent in Great
Britain", in Report of the Committee appointed at a Meeting of
Journeymen, Chiefly Printers, to take into Consideration Certain
Propositions, Submitted to Them by Mr. George Mudie, Having for
their Object a System of Social Arrangement, Calculated to Effect
Essential Improvements in the Condition of the Working Classes
(London: The Medallic Cabinet, 1821), 4-5.
Joshua Milne, "Rights of Industry. Founding of the National
Regeneration Society in Favour of the Eight-Hour Day", The Crisis,
7 December 1833, 117.
Benjamin Warden, "Master v. Slave. On Paid Labour in
Communities", New Moral World, 2 February 1839, 228-229.
Part 2. Visions of the Future
Robert Owen, Address delivered to the Inhabitants of New
Lanark, on January 1st, 1816, on the Opening of the Institution
Established for the Formation of Character (London: Hatchard,
1816).
George Mudie, "Prospectus", The Economist, 19 January 1821,
viii-xii.
John Minter Morgan, The Revolt of the Bees (London; printed for
Longman, Rees, Orme, Browne and Greene [1826]1839), 22-27.
Robert Owen, "The Social System, Chapter V [continued],
Constitutions, Laws and Regulations of a Community", New Harmony
Gazette, 21 February 1827.
"One of the People" [William Lovett], "To the Wealth-Producing
Classes of England", Magazine of Useful Knowledge and Co-operative
Miscellany, n°1, January 1830, 7-10.
George Fleming, "To the Socialists of Great Britain. Letter
from Tytherly Community", New Moral World, 30 November 1839,
920-22.
Part 3. Concepts of Political Change
Robert Owen, A New View of Society, or, Essays on the Formation
of the Human Character: Preparatory to the Development of a Plan
for Gradually Ameliorating the Condition of Mankind (London:
printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1816), Fourth
Essay, 143-170.
Sir William de Crespigny and Alexander Hamilton of Dalziell,
‘Motion Respecting Mr. Owen’s Plan’, House of Commons Minutes
(Hansard), 16th December 1819.
Robert Owen, Lectures on an Entire New State of Society:
Comprehending an Analysis of British Society, Relative to the
Production and Distribution of Wealth, the Formation of Character,
and Government, Domestic and Foreign (London: J. Brooks, 1830) III,
42-45.
Rowland Detrosier, An Address, Delivered to the Members of the
New Mechanics’ Institution, Manchester, on Friday Evening, March
25, 1831: On the Necessity of an Extension of Moral and Political
Instruction among the Working Classes (Manchester: W. Strange
1831).
William Cameron, The First Trumpet. An Address to the Disciples
of Robert Owen, on the Importance and Necessity of Speedily
Accomplishing a Bond of Union of Mutual Interest, for Gradually
carrying into Operation the New Science of Society (London: J.
Brooks, 1832).
John Finch, "Liverpool - First Public Social Festival and
Ball", letter to the editor of the Liverpool Chronicle, 29 November
1838, reprinted in the New Moral World, 1 December 1838, 91.
Alexander Campbell, "Progress of Moral Reform. Mr. Campbell’s
Missionary Tour", New Moral World, 30 March 1839, 362.
Part 4. Political Economy
Robert Owen, Report to the County of Lanark, of a Plan for
Relieving Public Distress (Glasgow: Wardlaw & Cunninghame [1820]
1821), 1-7.
Thomas Hodgskin, Labour Defended against the Claims of Capital
or the Unproductiveness of Capital Proved with Reference to the
Present Combinations Amongst Journeymen. (London: Knight and Lacey,
1825), 83-92.
William Thompson, Labor Rewarded. The Claims of Labor and
Capital Conciliated: or, How to Secure to Labor the Whole Products
of its Exertions. By One of the Idle Classes. (London: printed for
Hunt and Clarke, 1827), 75-88.
William Pare, "Laws of the Birmingham Co-operative Society, and
Trading Fund Association", in An Address Delivered at the Opening
of the Birmingham Cooperative Society (Birmingham: printed for W.
Plastans, and published by the Society, 1828), 27-32.
John Gray, "Sketch of a Commercial Constitution", in The Social
System: a Treatise on the Principle of Exchange (Edinburgh: William
Tait 1831), 30-39.
George Mudie, Gazette of the Exchange Bazaars, and Practical
Guide to the Rapid Establishment of the Public Prosperity, 20
October 1832, n°5.
John Francis Bray, "An Outline of a Social Movement", in
Labour’s Wrongs and Labour’s Remedy; or, The Age of Might and the
Age of Right. (Leeds: David Green, 1839), 154-176.
Part 5. Ways of Organizing
"Articles of Agreement of the Establishment at Orbiston", The
Register for the First Society of Adherents to Divine Revelation,
at Orbiston, n°1, 10 November 1825.
"Proceedings of the London Co-operative Society. An Address
Delivered before the Society, on New Year’s-Day", Co-operative
Magazine and Monthly Herald, n°2, February 1826, 54-59.
"Rules and Regulations of the Equitable Labour Exchange, Gray’s
Inn Road, London, for the Purpose of Relieving the Productive
Classes from Poverty, by their Own Industry, and for the Mutual
Exchange of Labour for Equal Value of Labour", The Crisis, n°27, 8
September 1832, 105-106.
William Carpenter (ed.), "Incipient Community"in Proceedings of
the Third Cooperative Congress, held in London (London:W. Strange
1832), 85-95.
‘Rules and Regulations of the Grand National Consolidated
Trades’ Union of Great Britain and Ireland: instituted for the
Purpose of More Effectually Enabling the Working Classes to Secure,
Protect, and Establish the Rights of Industry’, (London: Harjette
and Saville, 1834).
"Progress of Social Reform", New Moral World, 6 August 1843,
46-47.
Universal Community of Rational Religionists, The Constitution
and Laws of the Rational Society: as Agreed to at the Annual
Congress, held at Harmony Hall, Hants., May 10, 1843 (London:
printed and published for the Society by W. Johnston, 1843.
Part 6. Democracy and the State
Robert Owen, An Address to the Working Classes (1819),
reprinted in A Supplementary Appendix to the First Volume of the
Life of Robert Owen… (London: Effingham Wilson, 1858),
225-231.
Frances Wright, Fanny Wright Unmasked by her Own Pen.
Explanatory Notes, Respecting the Nature and Objects of the
Institution of Nashoba, and of the Principles Upon Which It is
Founded, Addressed to the Friends of Human Improvement, in All
Countries and of All Nations (New York: [1827]1830).
Robert Owen, "Mr. Owen’s Memorial to the Republic of Mexico,
and a Narrative of the Proceedings Thereon", in Robert Owen’s
Opening Speech, and His Reply to the Rev. Alex. Campbell…
(Cincinnati: published for R. Owen, 1829), p. 184-190.
William Carpenter, An Address to the Working Classes on the
Reform Bill (London: W. Strange 1831), 13-16.
Henry Hetherington, Poor Man’s Guardian, 14 January 1832, p.
245-246.
James Napier Bailey, The Model Republic: a Monthly Journal of
Politics, Literature, and Theology, n°1, 1 January 1843, 1-4.
"Meeting of Congress, Friday, May 10, 1844", New Moral World, 8
June 1844, 402-404.
Part 7. The New Religion and the Old
"Philadelphus" [Benjamin Scott Jones], The Economist, n°51, 2
March 1821, 399-408.
Abram Combe, The Religious Creed of the New System (Edinburgh:
printed by D. Schaw, 1824), 3-6.
Robert Owen, "Address delivered at the Annual Congress of the
Association of All Classes of All Nations, held in Manchester, from
the 10th to the 30y of May, 1837", in Six Lectures Delivered in
Manchester previously to the Discussion between Mr. Robert Owen and
the Rev. J.H. Roebuck (Manchester: A. Heywood, 1837), 102-112.
Charles Southwell, "Policy versus Principle. To the Socialists
of England. Letter V", The Oracle of Reason; Or, Philosophy
Vindicated, n°11, 5 March 1842, 89-91.
Emma Martin, Religion Superseded, or the Moral Code of Nature
Sufficient for the Guidance of Man (London: Watson, 1844).
"T.B.", "Account of an Owenite Nuptial Ceremony", New Moral
World, 29 March 1845, 319.
Part 8. Gender, Sexuality and Family Relations
Catherine Vale Whitwell, "Conclusion, in which some Thoughts on
Female Education are offered", in An Astronomical Catechism, Or,
Dialogues Between a Mother and her Daughter (London: printed for
and sold by the author,) 1818, 345-359.
William Thompson and Anna Doyle Wheeler, Appeal to One Half of
the Human Race, Women, Against the Pretensions of the Other Half,
Men: to Retain in Political, and Thence in Civil and Domestic
Slavery; in Reply to a Paragraph of Mr. Mill’s Celebrated "Article
on Government" (London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown and
Green, 1825), 198-206.
Anna Doyle Wheeler, "Rights of Women. A Lecture delivered by
Mrs. Wheeler, last year, in a Chapel near Finsbury Square", British
Co-operator, 1830, 12-15.
Robert Dale Owen, Moral Physiology; or, A Brief and Plain
Treatise on the Population Question (NewYork: Wright and Owen
1830), 13-18.
‘Concordia’, "To Robert Owen, Esq.", The Crisis, 22 June 1833,
189-190.
Robert Owen, Lectures on the Marriages of the Priesthood of the
old Immoral World, Delivered in the year 1835, before the passing
of the new Marriage Act (Leeds: J. Hobson [1835] 1840), 3-14.
"M.A.S.", ‘On the Necessary Co-operation of Both Sexes for
Human Advancement’, New Moral World, 26 August 1843, 65.
Part 9. War, Peace and Internationalism
Robert Owen, "Memorial of Robert Owen, of New Lanark, in
Scotland, to the Allied Powers Assembled in Congress, at
Aix-la-Chapelle, in Behalf of the Working Classes, 1818", reprinted
in Manifesto of Robert Owen… (London: Effingham Wilson, 1840),
31-41.
Constitution of the Blue Spring Community for the Promotion of
Science and Industry (1826).
John Finch, "Ralahine (Ireland); or Human Improvement and Human
Happiness", Letters I-IV, New Moral World, 31 March-21 April
1838.
"Proceedings of Congress, Saturday, May 16, 1840", New Moral
World, 13 June 1840, 1314-1316.
Thomas Hunt, Report to a Meeting of Intending Emigrants:
Comprehending a Practical Plan for Founding Co-operative Colonies
of United Interests in the North-Western Territories of the United
States, (London, W. Ostell, 1843), 2-10.
Friedrich Engels, "Progress of Social Reform on the Continent",
New Moral World, 23 Oct. - 18 Nov. 1843.
"Meeting of English and Foreign Communists", New Moral World,
28 September 1844, 109-111.
Volume 2: Socialism and Co-operation in Britain, 1850-1918
Edited by Peter Gurney
Part 1. Redefining socialism
1. J. M. Ludlow, ‘Labour and the Poor’, Fraser’s Magazine,
January 1850, pp. 13-18
2. E. V. Neale, Report of the 2nd Co-operative Conference held
at Manchester…1853 (London: E. Lumley, 1853), pp. 3-7
3. G. J. Holyoake, Life and last days of Robert Owen, of New
Lanark (London: Holyoake & Co., 1859), pp. 17-24
4. Frederic Harrison, ‘Industrial Co-operation’, Fortnightly
Review, January 1866, pp. 479-488, 491-493, 497-499.
5. William Pare, ‘The Land! The Land!’, Co-operative News, 5
October 1872, pp. 505-506.
6. George Dawson, ‘Co-operative Villages – Co-operation and
Communism’, Co-operative News, 12 February 1876; 19 February 1876,
pp. 81-93.
7. W. H. C., ‘Modern English Communism’, Co-operative News, 25
August 1877, p. 448
8. Henry Travis, ‘Advanced Co-operation, the Socialism of
England’, English Socialism (Manchester: Abel Heywood, 1879), pp.
1-7.
Part 2. Political economy
9. John Holmes, The Economic Advantages of Co-operation
Substantiated. A letter addressed to the Rev. Norman Macleod, D.D.,
proving the truth of the large profits from co-operative economy,
as stated at the Glasgow meeting of the Association for the
Promotion of Social Science (Leeds: David Green, 1860), pp. 12-18,
21-23, 25-26, 29-30
10. John Parker, ‘Land, Free Trade, and Reciprocity’,
Co-operator, 4 December 1869, pp. 836-837.
11. G. J. Holyoake, The Logic of Co-operation (Manchester: Co-op
Printing Society, 1873), pp. 6-11.
12. Ben Jones, ‘Suggestions for carrying out the proposals for
the education of co-operators’, Co-operative News, 4 November 1882,
pp. 743-744.
13. Alfred Marshall, Inaugural address delivered at the
twenty-first annual Cooperative Congress ... 1889 (Manchester:
Central Co-operative Board, 1889), pp. 3-5, 7-13, 28-30.
14. Hodgson Pratt, The Marriage of Labour and Capital (London:
The Labour Association, 1896), pp. 1-3, 6-8.
15. Debate on trusts, The 35th Annual Co-operative Congress,
1903 (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1903), pp. 345-347.
Part 3. Class, democracy and the state
16. Ernest Jones and Lloyd Jones, ‘Discussion at Halifax’, Notes
to the People, Vol 2, 1852, pp. 793-806, 823-829.
17. Co-operation v. Socialism: Being a Report of a Debate
between Mr H. H. Champion and Mr Ben Jones (Manchester: Central
Co-op Board, 1887), pp. 6-23.
18. Harry Quelch, Trade Unionism, Co-operation, and
Social-Democracy (London: Twentieth Century Press, 1892), pp.
10-16.
19. W. T. Carter, Co-operation is Reasonable Socialism
(Manchester: Co-op Union, 1894), pp. 1-8
20. Beatrice Webb, The Co-operative Movement in Great Britain
(London: Swan Sonnenschein, 1895), pp. 224-241.
21. Tom Mann, ‘Trade Unionism and Co-operation’, in Edward
Carpenter (ed), Forecasts of the Coming Century (Manchester: Labour
Press, 1897), pp. 31-36, 40.
22. Philip Snowden, Co-operative News, 29 April 1905, p. 493
23. Percy Redfern, ‘The Conflict of Capitalism and Democracy’,
CW S Annual (Manchester: CWS, 1910), pp. 191-192, 196-198,
201-218.
24. John Maclean, Justice, 10 May 1913, p. 7.
Part 4 Utopianism and the religion of co-operation
25. J. T. W. Mitchell’s presidential address, The 24th Annual
Co-operative Congress, 1892 (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1892), pp.
6-8.
26. Ben Jones, Co-operative Production (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1894), pp. 730-732, 809-815
27. Ramsden Balmforth, Co-operation as a democratic force: being
a sermon preached before the Delegates at the Co-operative
Congress, Huddersfield on June 9th, 1895, in Fitzwilliam Street
Unitarian Church (London: The Labour Association, 1895), pp.
1-7.
28. Catherine Webb, ‘The "Community Idea"’, Millgate Monthly,
November 1908, pp. 87-91.
29. Percy Redfern, Co-operation for All (Manchester: Co-op
Union, 1914), pp. 115-124.
Part 5 Gender and consumer organising
30. ‘Vice President’s Address’, Miss Greenwood on women’s
position, Report of the 17th Annual Congress of Delegates from
Co-operative Societies…1885 (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1885), pp.
71-72
31. William Marcroft, The Marcroft Family and the Inner Circle
of Human Life (Rochdale: E. Wrigley & Sons Ltd., 1888), pp.
50-52
32. Margaret Llewelyn Davies, The Relations between Co-operation
and Socialistic Aspirations (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1890), pp.
12-13
33. Catherine Webb, The Women’s Guild and Store Life (1892), pp.
1-8.
34. Margaret Llewelyn Davies, The Women’s Co-operative Guild,
1883-1904 (Kirkby Lonsdale: WCG, 1904), pp. 141-147, 161-163.
35. Sarah Reddish, ‘The Efforts of Women in the Co-operative
Movement’, Bolton Co-operative Record, January 1916, pp. 8-9.
Part 6. Internationalism, empire and war
36. E. O. Greening, International Co-operation and the
Constitution of the International Co-operative Alliance (London,
1895), pp. 1-8.
37. Édouard de Boyve, Wheatsheaf, October 1902, pp. 52-53.
38. T. W. Allen’s speech, The 40th Annual Co-operative Congress,
1908 (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1908), pp. 359-360.
39. Hans Műller, ‘Co-operation and Socialism’, Co-operative
News, 14 January 1911, pp. 46-47.
40. William Lander, ‘Mr W. Lander’s Visit to West Africa’,
Bolton Co-operative Record, November 1914, pp. 3-4
41. W. J. Douse’s presidential address, The 47th Annual
Co-operative Congress, 1915 (Manchester: Co-op Union, 1915), pp.
54-55.
Part 7. The sense of the past
42. G. J. Holyoake, ‘History of the Rochdale Pioneers’, Daily
News, 6 July 1857
43. Isa Nicholson, Our Story: The Co-operative Movement
(Manchester: Co-op Union, 1903), pp. 7-28.
44. ‘The Great Miners’ Lock-out. £67,000 Withdrawn from the
Society, 1893’, in The Coronation History of the Barnsley British
Co-operative Society Limited. 1862-1902 (Manchester: Co-operative
Wholesale Society, 1903), pp. 93-99.
45. Jasmes Haslam, ‘Industrial Accrington: Historical Sketch of
its Development’, in A history of fifty years of progress of
Accrington and Church Industrial Co-operative Society Ltd.,
1860-1910 (Manchester: Co-op Newspaper Society, 1910), pp. 194-205,
208.
46. Allen Clarke, "The Men who Fought for us" in the "Hungry
Forties": a Tale of Pioneers and Beginnings (Manchester:
Co-operative Newspaper Society, 1914), pp. 58-74, 167-72
47. James Connolly, ‘An Irish Utopia’, in Labour in Ireland.
Labour in Irish History. The Re-conquest of Ireland (Dublin:
Maunsel & Co: 1917), pp. 129-144.
Volume 3. Fabians, the ILP and the Labour Party
Edited by Peter Lamb
Part 1. Work as it was and how it might be
William Jameson, ‘Why Should London Grow’, Land Lessons for
Town Folk, 1896, p. 1-12.
Keir Hardie, Dealing with the Unemployed: A Hint from the Past,
Nineteenth Century, article, December, 1904, pp. 1-14.
H. Russell Smart, The Right to Work, Independent Labour Party,
c 1908, pp. 3-15.
Part 2. Visions of the Future
Sidney Webb, The Progress of Socialism: A Lecture, c 1888, pp.
3-18.
Fred Hammill, The Claims and Progress of Labour Representation,
Labour Literature Society (North England) ca 1894, pp. 3-16
Robert Blatchford, ‘The Need for a Labour Party’, in Britain
for the British, 1902, pp. 148-155.
Philip Snowden, The Individual under Socialism: A Lecture, c
1908, pp. 3-14.
Part 3. Concepts of Political Change
Sidney Webb, What Socialism Means: A Call to the Unconverted -
A Lecture Delivered for the Fabian Society, 3rd ed, c 1888, p.
2.
Fabian Society, What Socialism Is, (London: Fabian Society,
1890), pp. 1-3.
Sidney Webb, poster for Socialism!: The First of a Course of
Four Lectures Will be Given in the Co-operative Hall, High Street,
on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 1890 by Sidney Webb, 1890.
R. J. Derfel, On the Importance of Right Methods in Teaching
Socialism: A Paper Read to the Manchester and District Fabian
Society, February 10th, 1891, pp. 1-15.
Annie Besant and W.J. Nairn, What is Socialism? A Discussion
between Mrs. Annie Besant and Mr W. J. Nairn, (Glasgow, SDF, 1892),
pp. 1-8.
Part 4. Political Economy
Keir Hardie, Miners' Eight Hours Bill: speech by J Keir Hardie,
MP, in the House of Commons, reprinted from The Labour Leader,
(London: John Penny, 1902).
Ramsay MacDonald, The New Unemployed Bill of the Labour Party,
(London: Independent Labour Party, 1907), pp. 3-15.
Richard Higgs, Socialism and Agriculture, (London: Independent
Labour Party 1908), pp. 3-15.
Part 5. Ways of Organizing
Joint Committee of Socialist Bodies, Manifesto of the joint
committee of socialist bodies, (London, Twentieth Century
Press,1893), pp. 1-8.
Labour Representation Committee, Why We Are Independent,
(London: Labour Representation Committee, 1903), pp. 1-4.
Labour Representation Committee, Why is the L.R.C. Independent?
(London: Labour Representation Committee, c. 1905).
Labour Party, Labour and Politics: Why Trade Unionists Should
Support the Labour Party, (London: Labour Party, 1907).
Keir Hardie, The Party Pledge and the Osborne Judgement,
Manchester: The National Press Ltd, 1910, pp. 1-16.
Part 6. Democracy and the State
Ramsay MacDonald, The Law and Trade Union Funds: A Plea for
"Ante-Taff Vale", (London: Independent Labour Party, 1903, PP.
3-15
Margaret Bondfield, The Women’s Suffrage Controversy, London:
Adult Suffrage Society, 1905, pp. 1-4.
Keir Hardie, The Citizenship of Women: A Plea for Women's
Suffrage, fourth edition, (London: Independent Labour Party, 1906),
pp. 6-15.
Part 7. The New Religion and the Old
Tom Mann, A Socialist’s View of Religion and the Churches,
(London, Clarion, 1896), pp. 1-16.
Robert Blatchford, The New Religion, 2nd edition, (London,
Clarion, 1897), pp. 1-12.
Part 8. Gender, Sexuality and Family Relations
Beatrice Webb, Women and the Factory Acts, (London, Fabian
Society,1896), pp. 3-15.
H.G. Wells, Socialism and the Family, (London, A. C. Fifield,
1906), pp. 43-60.
H.G. Wells, Will Socialism Destroy the Home?, (London,
Independent Labour Party, c.1907), pp. 1-14.
Katharine Bruce Glasier, Socialism and the Home, (London,
Independent Labour Party, c.1909), pp. 1-11.
C.M. Lloyd, The New Children’s Charter, (London, Independent
Labour Party and Fabian Society, 1912), pp. 3, 6-20.
Part 9. War, Peace and Internationalism
G.H. Perris, Hands Across the Sea: Labour’s Plea for
International Peace, (Manchester: The National Labour Press, c
1910), pp. 1-16.
Harry Dubery and Keir Hardie, A Labour Case Against
Conscription, (Manchester: The National Labour Press c.1913), pp.
3-14
Henry Noel Brailsford, The Origins of the Great War, (London:
Union of Democratic Control, 1914), pp. 3-17
Volume 4. Anglo-Marxists
Edited by Kevin Morgan
Part 1. The idea of socialism
1. Socialism Made Plain. Being the Social and Political
Manifesto of the Democratic Federation, Democratic Federation,
1883
2. ‘The Manifesto of the Socialist League’, Commonweal, February
1885, pp. 1-2
3. Charlotte Wilson, ‘Anarchism’, Justice, 8, 22, 29 November
and 6 December 1884.
4. William Morris, ‘Why Not?’, Justice, 12 April 1884.
5. John Burns, The Man with the Red Flag, (London, Twentieth
Century Press, 1886), pp. 3-
12
6. Walter Crane, ‘How I became a socialist’, Justice, 30 June
1894
7. H.W. Hobart, Social Democracy or Democratic Socialism, Social
Democratic Federation: Salford District Council, 1895, pp. 3-6, 12,
15-16.
8. H.M. Hyndman, ‘Social-democrat or socialist?’, Social
Democrat, August 1897, pp. 228-231.
9. Jack C. Squire, Socialism and Art, Social Democratic
Federation, 1907, pp. 5-16.
Part 2. Concepts of political change
10. William Morris, extract rom ‘How the Change Came’ from News
from Nowhere, reprinted in Commonweal, 17, 24 and 31 May 1890.
11. Joseph Lane, An Anti-statist, Communist Manifesto,
International Revolutionary Library, 1887, pp. 2-22.
12. Harry Quelch, The Co-Partnership Snare, Twentieth Century
Press, c.1913, pp. 1-3, 14-16.
13. George Lansbury, ‘Social-democrats and the Administration of
the Poor Law’, Social Democrat, January 1897, pp. 14-18.
14. Edward Carpenter, ‘Long Live Syndicalism!’, The Syndicalist,
May 1912,
Part 3. Political economy
15. H.M. Hyndman, ‘The Iron Law of Wages’, Justice, 15 March
1884, p. 3.
16. H.M. Hyndman, Socialism and Slavery (1884), Social
Democratic Federation, 1899 edn, pp. 3-15.
17. William Morris, Useful Work Versus Useless Toil (1885),
Hammersmith Socialist Society, 1893 edn., pp. 3-12, 19.
18. William Morris, ‘The Reward of "Genius"’, Commonweal, 25
September 1886, pp. 205-206.
19. Robert Tressell, extract from ‘The Great Money Trick’ in The
Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (1914).
Part 4. Work and social conditions
20. Tom Mann, What a Compulsory Eight-hour Day Means to the
Workers, London, Modern Press, 1886.
21. Countess of Warwick, Unemployment: Its Causes and
Consequences, London, Twentieth Century Press, 1906, pp. 5-16.
22. Dora B. Montefiore, Prison Reform from a Social-Democratic
Point of View, London, Twentieth Century Press, 1909, pp. 1-14.
23. F.O. Pickard-Cambridge, Social-Democracy and the Housing
Problem, London, Twentieth Century Press, 1900, pp. 3-4, 6-7,
22-24.
Part 5. Ways of organising
24. Thomas Binning, ‘Organised Labour. The Duty of the Trades
Unions in Relation to Socialism’, Commonweal, 14, 21 and 28 August
1886.
25. Harry Quelch, ‘Social Democracy and Industrial
Organisation’, Social Democrat, 15 April 1910.
26. Tom Mann, ‘Prepare for Action’, Industrial Syndicalist, July
1910, pp. 31-54.
27. T. Hunter, ‘Leadermania’, Justice, 13 November 1897, p.
2.
Part 6. Democracy and the state
28. Ernest Belfort Bax, ‘The Will of the Majority’, in The
Ethics of Socialism, London: Swann Sonnenschein, 1889, pp.
120-128.
29. [Henry Salt], ‘Workmen’s Jubilee Ode’, Social Democrat,
February 1897.
30. ‘After the Jubilee’, Justice, 16 October 1897, p. 2.
31. Ernest Belfort Bax, ‘The "Monstrous Regiment" of Womanhood’,
Essays in Socialism
New and Old, London, Grant Richards, 1906, pp. 276-279,
282-294.
32. Dora Montefiore, ‘Why I Am Opposed to Female Suffrage’,
Social Democrat, April 1909.
Part 7. The new religion and the old
33. E. Belfort Bax and H. Quelch, ‘The socialist conception of
ethics’ from A New Catechism of Socialism, London, Twentieth
Century Press, 1902, pp. 22-30.
34. Herbert Burrows, ‘A Christmas Sermon which the Bishop of
London has been asked to Preach in Westminster Abbey on Sunday,
December 25’, Justice, 24 December 1887, p. 4
35. J. Connell, Socialism and the Survival of the Fittest,
London, Twentieth Century Press (c. 1891), third edition, 1910, pp.
1-17
36. James Leatham, Was Jesus a Socialist? (1891), Worker Office,
Huddersfield, , London, Twentieth Century Press, c. 1908, pp.
1-15.
37. Edward Carpenter, ‘Simplification of Life’, from England’s
Ideal, Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey & Co, 1887, pp. 79-99.
Part 8. Gender, sexuality, family and personal relations
38. Ernest Belfort Bax, ‘The Commercial Hearth’, Commonweal, 8
May 1886, p. 42 and 15 May 1886, p. 50.
39. Dora B. Montefiore, Some Words to Socialist Women, Social
Democratic Party Women’s Committee, London, Twentieth Century
Press, 1908, pp. 5-16.
40. Herbert Burrows, The Future of Woman, London, Twentieth
Century Press, 1909, pp. 1-14.
41. George Whitehead, Socialism and Eugenics, London, Twentieth
Century Press, 1911, pp. 1-15.
Part 9. War, peace and internationalism
42. Manifesto of the Socialist League on the Soudan War,
Socialist League, 1885
43. R.B. Cunninghame Graham, The Imperial Kailyard. Being a
Biting Satire on English colonisation, London, Twentieth Century
Press, 1896, pp. 3-15.
44. H.M. Hyndman, The Approaching Catastrophe in India, London,
Twentieth Century
Press, 1897, pp. 3-16
45. John R. Widdup, ‘Socialism and Colonial Development’, Social
Democrat, July 1898, pp. 208-211.
46. Harry Quelch, Social-Democracy and the Armed Nation, London,
Twentieth Century
Press, 1900, pp. 3-14, 16.
47. Dora Montefiore, Anti-militarism from the workers' point of
view: why every working man and woman should be an anti-militarist,
Workers’ Anti-Militarist Committee, 1913, pp. 1-7.
48. James Connolly, ‘A Continental Revolution’, Forward, 15
August 1914, pp. 38-42.
Part 10. The sense of the past
49. Edward Aveling, ‘George Julian Harney: A Straggler of 1848’,
Social Democrat, January 1897, pp. 3-8.
50. R.B. Cunninghame Graham, ‘Bloody Niggers’, Social Democrat,
April 1897, pp. 104-109.
51. Theodore Rothstein, ‘Why is Socialism in England at a
Discount?’, Social Democrat, March 1898, pp. 69-74 and April 1898,
pp. 112-17.
52. H.W. Lee, The First of May: The International Labour Day
(1900), London, Twentieth Century Press, 1904, pp. 3-16.