Flashes from China by a Socialist Sailor,The Work of Maximilian Luce, Child Slaves of the Cotton Mills by Carrie W. Allen all linked to online texts below.
International Socialist Review. Vol. 11 No. 9. March, 1911.
Contents: In Prison with Herve by William D. Haywood, Flashes from China by a Socialist Sailor, The Japanese Revolutionists by a Japanese Comrade, Child Slaves of the Cotton Mills by Carrie W. Allen, A Living Protest by W.D.H., Morgan Muzzles the Magazines, Gagging the Postal Employes by One of Them, One Woman-A True Story by Cloudesy Johns, The Work of Maximilian Luce, Study Course in Economics by Mary E. Marcy, Porto Rico by Leah Cay, The Seal Hunters by R. Page Lincoln, The Garment Workers’ Strike Lost by Robert Dvorak, The Haywood Meetings, DEPARTMENTS. Editorials: Comrade Maurer’s First Bill; The Daily Socialist and the Garment Workers; The Class Struggle in California, International Notes, The World of Labor, News and Views, Publishers’ Department.
The International Socialist Review (ISR) was published monthly in Chicago from 1900 until 1918 by Charles H. Kerr and critically loyal to the Socialist Party of America. It is one of the essential publications in U.S. left history. During the editorship of A.M. Simons it was largely theoretical and moderate. In 1908, Charles H. Kerr took over as editor with strong influence from Mary E Marcy. The magazine became the foremost proponent of the SP’s left wing growing to tens of thousands of subscribers. It remained revolutionary in outlook and anti-militarist during World War One. It liberally used photographs and images, with news, theory, arts and organizing in its pages. It articles, reports and essays are an invaluable record of the U.S. class struggle and the development of Marxism in the decades before the Soviet experience. It was closed down in government repression in 1918.
PDF of full issue: https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/isr/v11n09-mar-1911-ISR-gog-Corn-OCR.pdf
