Novy Mir (1911 newspaper)
Appearance
Novy Mir (Russian: Но́вый Ми́ръ, IPA: [ˈnovɨj ˈmʲir], New World) was a Russian language socialist newspaper published in the United States during 1911-1938.[1]
It was published by Russian social democratic émigrés in New York City in 1911–1917 until their return to Russia after the February Revolution of 1917. Its first editor-in-chief was Leo Deutsch. By 1916 it was edited by Nikolai Bukharin and Alexandra Kollontai, who were briefly joined by Leon Trotsky when he arrived in New York in January 1917. V. Volodarsky, then living in Philadelphia, was one of the contributors.[2][3][4]
After the Russian Revolution the newspaper was issued intermittently putting forth varying moderate laborist and leftist politics until 1930s.
References
[edit]- ^ Novyĭ mir ezhednevnai︠a︡ rabochai︠a︡ gazeta.
- ^ See "A Chronology" in Conversations in Exile: Russian Writers Abroad, ed. John Glad, Duke University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-8223-1298-0 p.275
- ^ David Shub, "The Russian Press in the United States," The Russian Review, III, No. 1 (1943), 123-124.
- ^ Jerome Davis, The Russian Immigrant (New York, 1922), pp. 124-126.
Categories:
- Socialist newspapers published in the United States
- Newspapers established in 1911
- Newspapers disestablished in 1938
- Defunct newspapers published in New York City
- Marxist newspapers
- Defunct Russian-language newspapers
- Russian-American culture in New York City
- Russian-language mass media in the United States
- Non-English-language newspapers published in the United States
- Communist periodicals published in the United States
- Newspapers published in the United States stubs