The Liberator. Vol. 3 No. 1. January, 1920.
Contents: Russia Victorious: Verbatim Report of a Conversation with Isaac McBride, Tom Mooney by William Ellery Leonard, The Steel Strike by Mary Heaton Vorse, The New Wild West, What About Mexico? by Irwin Grinch, Bogalusa by Mary White Covington, Hope Revives in Hungary by Frederick Kuh, The Presumption of Innocence in Kansas by Winthrop D. Lane, Practical Feminism by Crystal Eastman, Books by Floyd Dell, The Paintings of William Sanger by Robert Minor, Art Young, Boardman Robinson, William Sanger, William Gropper, Maurice Becker, Lydia Gibson.
The Liberator was published monthly from 1918, first established by Max Eastman and his sister Crystal Eastman continuing The Masses, was shut down by the US Government during World War One. Like The Masses, The Liberator contained some of the best radical journalism of its, or any, day. It combined political coverage with the arts, culture, and a commitment to revolutionary politics. Increasingly, The Liberator oriented to the Communist movement and by late 1922 was a de facto publication of the Party. In 1924, The Liberator merged with Labor Herald and Soviet Russia Pictorial into Workers Monthly. An essential magazine of the US left.
PDF of full issue: https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/culture/pubs/liberator/1920/01/v3n01-w22-jan-1920-liberator-hr.pdf
