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The Communist Party of Canada during the Great Depression: Organizing and Class Consciousness

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Communist Party of Canada during the Great Depression: Organizing and Class Consciousness
Abstract
Canada experienced its worst economic crisis during the Great Depression of the 1930s with unprecedented numbers of Canadians suffering extreme economic and social hardship. Survival and struggle to change those conditions became as much a mark of the times as the economic circumstances themselves. The Communist Party of Canada (CPC) was one organization that played a significant role in this national upsurge of struggle. The Party believed that the worsening material conditions would engender class consciousness of Canadian workers, leading to the overthrow of the capitalist system to achieve a worker-farmer socialist state. The Party was instrumental in organizing workers, farmers, the unorganized and the unemployed, however, it was not successful in raising Canadian working class consciousness to a revolutionary level. The factors that will be analyzed as being the main contributing factors to the Party's limitations are the CPC1srelationship with the Comintern, repression by the Canadian state, and dominant ideology that prevailed in Canada during the Depression. From its inception in 1921 the CPC worked assiduously to meet the needs of Canadian workers in a rapidly changing economy in the 1920s and one that was also collapsing in the Depression. In many ways it recognized Canadian workers' needs in these times and was at the head of the labour movement fighting for workers' needs and defending them. However, the CPC was somewhat hamstrung by its very close relationship with the Comintern allowing this international communist body to dictate almost every move it made whether or not it was the best for Canadian workers. State repression of the CPC and labour movement, also had a curbing effect on the advancement of the CPC in its work with Canadian workers, forcing the Party underground, decimating its leadership and intimidating Party activists, unions and workers. Finally, dominant ideology during the Depression, in spite of serious threats by alternate sets of ideas, particularly those promulgated by the CPC, largely stood its ground as defender of the present capitalist system that relied on the exploitation of Canadian workers for its survival.
Type
M.A., Sociology and Anthropology
University
Simon Fraser University
Place
Burnaby, BC
Date
2004
# of Pages
149 pages
Language
English
Short Title
The Communist Party of Canada During the Great Depression
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Extra
Publisher: Simon Fraser University
Citation
Burger, A. (2004). The Communist Party of Canada during the Great Depression: Organizing and Class Consciousness [M.A., Sociology and Anthropology, Simon Fraser University]. https://summit.sfu.ca/_flysystem/fedora/sfu_migrate/8665/b37692501.pdf