Marxists Internet Archive: Doxey Wilkerson

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Doxey Alphonso Wilkerson

1905 - 1993

 

 

 


 

Works:

1939: Special Problems of Negro Education

1940: Class Forces in the Development of Free Public Education in the U.S.

1942: Agricultural Extension Services Among Negroes in the South
1942: FEPC - The Alphabet of Hope, New Masses, October 20, 1942

1943: The Negro's Stake in a Short War, [his first "Toward Freedom" weekly column] Daily Worker, October 13, 1943
1943: If Mrs. Roosevelt Were a Negro, Daily Worker, October 20, 1943
1943: Republican Demagogy and Negro Education, Part I; Part II, Daily Worker, October 28 and 29, 1943
1943: Warren's Sneak Attack, Daily Worker, November 3, 1943
1943: CIO Negro Delegates Active in Pushing Ban on Anti-Semitism, Chinese Exclusion, Daily Worker, November 4, 1943
1943: Negro-White Unity Glows in Bessemer, Daily Worker, November 6, 1943
1943: Negro Leadership, Daily Worker, November 13, 1943
1943: Why I Became a Communist, Part I; Part II, New Masses, November 16 and 23, 1943
1943: Negroes and Moscow Pacts, Daily Worker, November 18, 1943
1943: Poisonous Prejudices, Daily Worker, November 25, 1943
1943: Schuyler's Bloody Dream, Daily Worker, December 2, 1943
1943: 4 Major Strides Forward, Daily Worker, December 9, 1943
1943: The Negro in the War, New Masses, December 14, 1943
1943: A Blow at Negroes Too, Daily Worker, December 18, 1943
1943: Pattern for Equality, Daily Worker, December 25, 1943
1943: Out-of-Date Tactic, Daily Worker, December 30, 1943

1944: Negro Role for '44, Daily Worker, January 8, 1944
1944: Lessons of Scottsboro, Daily Worker, January 15, 1944
1944: How to Defend FEPC, Daily Worker, January 20, 1944
1944: Spiking Hitler's Weapon, Daily Worker, January 27, 1944
1944: Labor and the Negro, Daily Worker, February 3, 1944
1944: Negroes - and History, Daily Worker, February 10, 1944
1944: Three Centuries of Struggle for Negro Democratic Rights, Part I; Part II; Part III, Daily Worker, February 17-19, 1944
1944: Reaction Dies Hard, Daily Worker, March 9, 1944
1944: Negro Trade Unionists, Daily Worker, March 16, 1944
1944: Schuyler's Poison, Daily Worker, March 30, 1944
1944: The Negro People and the Communists
1944: Defending the FEPC, Daily Worker, April 8, 1944
1944: Trend of the Times, Daily Worker, April 15, 1944
1944: The Jefferson School, Daily Worker, April 29, 1944
1944: Freedom - Through Victory in War and Peace [from the book What the Negro Wants]
1944: AFL and the Poll Tax, Daily Worker, May 1, 1944
1944: The Maryland-District of Columbia Enlightenment Campaign, The Communist, May 1944
1944: The Reconstruction Goes On; Pepper, Hill Victories Spur It, Daily Worker, May 8, 1944
1944: Party Labels Are Not the Answer to the Negro Voters, Daily Worker, May 15, 1944
1944: Static Approach to a Changing World Means Impotence and Defeat, Daily Worker, May 22, 1944
1944: Anna Damon Made a Freer America, Daily Worker, May 29, 1944
1944: Attitudes Not Decisive in Shaping History, Daily Worker, June 5, 1944
1944: Coming Negro People's Assemby Revives an Honorable Tradition, Daily Worker, June 12, 1944
1944: Wilkie's Dilemma Helps Clarify Negro Voters, Daily Worker, June 19, 1944
1944: Negro Leaders Reflect Political Maturity of Race, Daily Worker, June 26, 1944
1944: An Open Letter to Ass't Atty.Gen. Littel, Daily Worker, July 3, 1944
1944: My Letter from GI Bill - THEY Find Time to Write, Daily Worker, July 10, 1944
1944: GOP Record Belies Platform Promises to Negro People, Daily Worker, July 17, 1944
1944: Democratic Platform Basic for Progress of Negro People, Daily Worker, July 24, 1944
1944: The Negro Press and the Democractic Convention, Daily Worker, July 31, 1944
1944: Two Fighting Men, [Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. and Vito Marcantonio] New Masses, August 1, 1944
1944: Lessons of the Transit Strike in Philadelphia, Daily Worker, August 7, 1944
1944: Fate of Postwar Negro Is the Stake for All America, Daily Worker, August 14, 1944
1944: We'll Have No New President Hayes, Daily Worker, August 21, 1944
1944: Observations on Stewart's 'The Negro in America', Daily Worker, September 4, 1944
1944: The Negro and the Elections, The Communist, September 1944
1944: Reaction Is Powerful, But Negro Struggle Goes Forward, Daily Worker, September 11, 1944
1944: "Uncle Remus" and the Modern World, Daily Worker, September 18, 1944
1944: Racism - A GOP Campaign Weapon, Daily Worker, September 25, 1944
1944: "Freedom Road" - A Weapon of Democracy, [review of the Howard Fast novel] The Communist, October 1944
1944: Negroes and Reconversion - The Seniority Question, Daily Worker, October 2, 1944
1944: Negro Postwar Layoffs and Teheran, Daily Worker, October 9, 1944
1944: FDR's Record on FEPC Compared with Dewey's, Daily Worker, October 16, 1944
1944: FDR Fights for Negro Soldiers, Sailors, Daily Worker, October 23, 1944
1944: "White Supremacy" and the Election, Daily Worker, October 30, 1944
1944: A Bloodless "Civil War", Daily Worker, November 6, 1944
1944: How the Negro Will Vote, New Masses, November 7, 1944
1944: Harlem's Vote for President, Daily Worker, November 13, 1944
1944: The Smiths are Dying Out, Daily Worker, November 20, 1944
1944: New Facts on the Seniority Adjustment Question, Daily Worker, November 27, 1944
1944: "The Negro and the Nation", Daily Worker, December 04, 1944
1944: Greek Democracy and Negro Freedom, Daily Worker, December 11, 1944
1944: Mr. Randolph Secedes from the World, Daily Worker, December 18, 1944
1944: The Real World Mr. Randolph Won't See, Daily Worker, December 25, 1944

1945: New Year Opens with Rally Against Franco, Daily Worker, January 1, 1945
1945: Negro Cutbacks, Seniority - Let's Admit the Problem, Daily Worker, January 8, 1945
1945: National Service Act and Negro Employment, Daily Worker, January 15, 1945
1945: Does the Pittsburgh Courier Want to Win the War?, Daily Worker, January 22, 1945
1945: How to Fight for Negro Rights, Daily Worker, January 29, 1945
1945: Carver School Students Learn Freedom's Dynamics, Daily Worker, February 5, 1945
1945: The Big Lesson of Negro History, Daily Worker, February 12, 1945
1945: 'Education' vs. 'Legislation' on Negro Rights, Daily Worker, February 26, 1945
1945: Some Thoughts on Civil War Reconstruction and Crimea, Daily Worker, March 5, 1945
1945: Now Is the Time to Kill Job Jimcrow, Daily Worker, March 12, 1945
1945: What the London Parley Means to the Negroes, Daily Worker, March 19, 1945
1945: First Break Through in Army Jimcrow, Daily Worker, March 26, 1945
1945: Bases for Confidence in a Freer World, Daily Worker, April 2, 1945
1945: The Negro Question and San Francisco, Daily Worker, April 9, 1945
1945: Roosevelt Made it Possible for Us to Win, Daily Worker, April 15, 1945
1945: The Time is Here for Equality in the Armed Forces, Daily Worker, April 30, 1945
1945: The Negro Worker After the War, Daily Worker, May 7, 1945
1945: Racism and the Japanese War, Daily Worker, May 21, 1945
1945: Danger Threatens Funds for FEPC, Daily Worker, May 28, 1945
1945: FEPC Crisis - A Test for President Truman, Daily Worker, June 4, 1945
1945: Polltax Repeal and FEPC, Daily Worker, June 15, 1945
1944: Speech to the Plenary Meeting of the National Committee, Communist Political Association, June 18-20, 1945, [on Browderism] Political Affairs, July 1945
1945: Race, Class and Social Security, Daily Worker, June 22, 1945
1945: Negro People's Conventions, Daily Worker, June 29, 1945
1945: Our Nation's Negro Soldiers, Daily Worker, July 6, 1945
1945: Lessons of the Newspaper Strike, Daily Worker, July 30, 1945
1945: Mississippi's Rankin Enters Harlem Politics, Daily Worker, September 26, 1945
1945: Ben Davis Symbolizes Negro Freedom Struggle, Daily Worker, November 5, 1945
1945: People Fought Postwar Reaction 80 Yrs. Ago, Daily Worker, November 19, 1945

1946: Introduction to Herbert Aptheker's The Negro People in America
1946: The Negro People and the American Nation (A discussion article) Political Affairs, July 1946

1947: What's Happening to 'People's Voice'?, Part I; Part II; Daily Worker, December 18 and 19, 1947

1948: The Negro Question, [review of Harry Haywood's Negro Liberation] Masses & Mainstream, December 1948

1949: Negro Culture: Heritage and Weapon, Masses & Mainstream, August 1949
1949: Major Essay on Negro Culture in Aug. Masses & Mainstream, by Harold Cruse, Daily Worker, August 5, 1949

1951: Soviet Journey, [review of George Marion's All Quiet in the Kremlim] Masses & Mainstream, February 1951
1951: Quick Action Urgent as Gov't. Rushes DuBois Trial, Daily Worker, May 2, 1951
1951: Dramatic Pamphlet on the Witchhunt Against Dr. DuBois, Daily Worker, June 27, 1951
1951: Henry Luce's Revolutionaries, Masses & Mainstream, September 1951
1951: On the Concept "Negro", [presentation to a Conference on Race Theories, Jefferson School of Social Science, September 22, 1951]
1951: They Are Trying to Sentance Dr. DuBois to Death, Daily Worker, October 19, 1951

1952: American Imperialism (Book Review), [review of Victor Perlo] Political Affairs, April 1952
1952: Race, Nation and the Concept ""Negro", Political Affairs, August 1952
1952: W.E.B. DuBois: In Battle for Peace, [book review] Masses & Mainstream, October 1952

1954: The Fight to Abolish Segregated Schools, Political Affairs, July 1954
1954: War Economy and Youth, [review of Albert Kahn's The Game of Death] Political Affairs, November 1954
1954: Poems of Peace and Freedom, [review of Walter Lowenfels' The Prisoners] Political Affairs, November 1954

1955: The People versus Segregated Schools
1955: The 46th Annual Convention of the NAACP, Political Affairs, August 1955

1956: Time to Reappraise CP Position on Negro Question, 16th National Convention Bulletin, Number 2, November 27, 1956

1957: We Still Fight Gloriously for Civil and Social Rights, [on W.E.B. DuBois' 89th birthday] Daily Worker, February 24, 1957
1957: Doxey Wilkerson Resigns from CP, Daily Worker, December 15, 1957