Writings of Leon Trotsky

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1929[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • C’est la Marche des Evenements! (February 25, 1929)
  • Deportation from the Soviet Union (February 25, 1929)
  • How Could This Happen? (February 25, 1929)
  • Stalin’s Victory (February 25, 1929)
  • Where Is the Soviet Republic Going? (February 25, 1929)
  • Is Parliamentary Democracy Likely to Replace the Soviets? (February 25, 1929)
  • On the Secret Ballot (February 27, 1929)
  • What Is the Immediate Aim of Exiling Trotsky? (March 4, 1929)
  • Protests to the GPU (March 5 and 8, 1929)
  • Interview by the Daily Express (March 16, 1929)
  • Within the Right-Centrist Bloc (March 20, 1929)
  • Open Letter to the Workers of the USSR (March 29, 1929)
  • Groupings in the Communist Opposition (March 31, 1929)
  • Tasks of the Opposition (March 1929)
  • What We Intend to Publish First (March 1929)
  • Communists and the Bourgeois Press (March 1929)
  • Statement to the Press (April 15, 1929)
  • A Lesson in Democracy I Did Not Receive (April 22, 1929)
  • Interview by the Osaka Mainichi (April 24, 1929)
  • Six Years of the Brandlerites (April 25, 1929)
  • Preface to La Revolution Defiguree (May 1, 1929)
  • The Basic, Fundamental Question (May 10, 1929)
  • Tasks of the American Opposition (May 1929)
  • The Capitulators of the Third Wave (May 22, 1929)
  • Radek and the Opposition (May 26, 1929)
  • The Political Situation in China and the Tasks of the Bolshevik-Leninist Opposition (June 1929)
  • The Bolshevik Oppositionists Need Help (June 1, 1929)
  • Why I Want to Come to London (June 11, 1929)
  • Once More on Brandler and Thalheimer (June 12, 1929)
  • Tenacity, Tenacity, Tenacity! (June 14, 1929)
  • What Will the First of August Bring? (June 26, 1929)
  • Combatting Lies and Slanders (June 1929)
  • Prologue, Mis Peripecias en Espana (June 1929)
  • From the Publisher (July 1929)
  • Necessary Clarifications Concerning the First of August (July 1929)
  • Diplomacy or Revolutionary Politics? (July 1, 1929)
  • A Man Overboard (July 3, 1929)
  • How Revolutionaries Are Formed (July 11, 1929)
  • A Letter to the Daily Herald (July 15, 1929)
  • The Sino-Soviet Conflict: A Press Statement (July 22, 1929)
  • A Wretched Document (July 27, 1929)
  • The Sino-Soviet Conflict and the Opposition (August 4, 1929)
  • An Open Letter to the Editorial Board of La Verite (August 6, 1929)
  • A Declaration of La Verite (August 1929)
  • A Letter to the Editorial Board of La Lutte de Classes (August 11, 1929)
  • To the Marx and Lenin Circle (August 22, 1929)
  • Questions for the Leninbund (August 24, 1929)
  • From a Letter to an Oppositionist in the USSR (August 24, 1929)
  • On the Psychology of Capitulation (September 1929)
  • Comrade Sosnovsky’s Letters (September 1929)
  • From the Publisher (September 1929)
  • G.I. Myasnikov’s Escape and His Ordeal (September 1929)
  • Radek and the Bourgeois Press (September 1929)
  • Defense of the Soviet Republic and the Opposition (September 7, 1929)
  • Where Is the Leninbund Going? (September 19, 1929)
  • A Letter to the Italian Left Communists (September 25, 1929)
  • An Open Letter to the Bolshevik-Leninists Who Signed the August 22 Declaration (September 25, 1929)
  • Letter to the USSR Accompanying the August 22 Declaration (September 25, 1929)
  • The Sino-Soviet Conflict and the Position of the Belgian Oppositionists (September 30, 1929)
  • On the Politics of the Left Opposition in Germany (September 30, 1929)
  • What Next? The Bolshevik Opposition in the CPSU (October 1929)
  • Rebuke to a Capitulator (October 1929)
  • Disarmament and the United States of Europe (October 4, 1929)
  • A Letter to Friends in the USSR (October 1929)
  • The Twelfth Anniversary of October (October 17, 1929)
  • Greetings to the Weekly Militant (October 19, 1929)
  • An Interview on the August 22 Declaration (October 19, 1929)
  • On Socialism in One Country and Ideological Prostration (November 1929)
  • We Need Help (November 1929)
  • The Faces Change, the System Remains (November 7, 1929)
  • The Austrian Crisis and Communism (November 13, 1929)
  • How to Help the Centrists (November 26, 1929)
  • A Return to the Party? (Autumn 1929)
  • From the Opposition’s Circular-Letters (December 20 and 28, 1929)
  • Bessedovsky’s “Revelations” (December 21, 1929)
  • A Reply to the Chinese Oppositionists (December 22, 1929)
  • The Murder of Jakob Blumkin (December 1929)

1930-1931[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • Manifesto on China of the International Left Opposition (September 1930)
  • To the conference of the German Left Opposition (September 17, 1930)
  • On the declaration by the Indochinese Oppositionists (September 18, 1930)
  • The Krestintern and the Anti-Imperialist League (Published September 1930)
  • A history of the second Chinese revolution is needed (Published September 1930)
  • Molotov's prosperity in knowledge (Published September 1930)
  • To the Bulgarian comrades (October 4, 1930)
  • To the Executive Committee of the Belgian Opposition (October 12, 1930)
  • Introduction to the Rakovsky declaration (October 22, 1930)
  • Tasks in the USSR (October 31, 1930)
  • The bloc of the Right and the Left (November 21, 1930)
  • What next in the campaign against the Russian right wing? (Published November 1930)
  • What is to be learned from the saboteurs' trial? (Published November 1930)
  • The fight against war can allow no illusions (Published November 1930)
  • On the question of Thermidor and Bonapartism (November 1930)
  • Thermidor and Bonapartism (November 26, 1930)
  • Doubts and objections about the Bulgarian manifesto (November 29, 1930)
  • Remarks on Frank's work on collectivization (December 9, 1930)
  • The Opposition's record on the Kuomintang (December 10, 1930)
  • The successes of socialism and the dangers of adventurism (December 1930)
  • Notes of a journalist (Published December 1930)
  • National conferences and internationalism (December 22, 1930)
  • Another victim of Stalin ( December 1930)
  • At the fresh grave of Kote Tsintsadze (January 7, 1931)
  • To the Chinese Left Opposition (January 8, 1931)
  • Critical remarks about Prometeo's resolution on democratic demands (January 15, 1931)
  • Monatte — Advocate of the social-patriots (January 26, 1931)
  • Problems of the German section (January 31, 1931)
  • A letter to the Politburo (February 15, 1931)
  • The crisis in the German Left Opposition (February 17, 1931)
  • Interview by the 'Manchester Guardian' (February 1931)
  • Nina V. Vorovskaya (Published March 1931)
  • The five-year plan in four years? (Published March 1931)
  • Notes of a journalist (Published March 1931)
  • The case of Comrade Ryazanov (March 8, 1931)
  • The real disposition of the pieces on the political chessboard (March 11, 1931)
  • I await criticism from the sections (April 1931)
  • Problems of the development of the USSR (April 4, 1931)
  • Two letters to the Prometeo group (April 14r-May 28, 1931)
  • A new slander against D.B. Ryazanov (May 1, 1931)
  • Part of the responsibility (May 23, 1931)
  • On Comrade Treint's declaration (May 23, 1931)
  • Notes of a journalist (Published June 1931)
  • Principled and practical questions facing the Left Opposition (June 5, 1931)
  • The Italian Opposition and the Spanish revolution (June 9, 1931)
  • French and the revolution (June 9, 1931)
  • French leadership problems (June 28, 1931)
  • Scoundrels and their assistants (July 8, 1931)
  • Letter to the 'Manchester Guardian' (July 1931)
  • Replies to an Associated Press correspondent (July 14, 1931)
  • A letter to 'Pravda' (July 15, 1931)
  • New zigzags and new dangers (July 15, 1931)
  • Greetings to the weekly 'Militant' (]uly 19, 1931)
  • Some ideas on the period and the tasks of the Left Opposition (July 28, 1931)
  • A motion and its interpretation (August 20, 1931)
  • Very significant facts (Published September 1931)
  • To friendly, sympathetic, vacillating, skeptical, and antagonistic readers (Published September 1931)
  • An explanation in a circle of friends (September 2, 1931)
  • A letter to Albert Treint (September 13, 1931)
  • Another letter to Albert Treint (September 22, 1931)
  • Internal difficulties of the French Communist League (September 25, 1931)
  • Letter to the conference of the French Communist League (September 25, 1931)
  • Summary on the French question (October 9, 1931)
  • A reply to Albert Weisbord (October 10, 1931)
  • Tasks of the Left Opposition in Bulgaria (October 17, 1931)
  • Tasks of the Left Opposition in Britain and India (November 7, 1931)
  • The British elections and the communists (November 10, 1931)
  • Russian-German trade relations (November 14, 1931)
  • What is fascism? (November 15, 1931)
  • What is a revolutionary situation? (November 17, 1931)
  • The Japanese invasion of Manchuria (November 30, 1931)
  • The founding of the German SAP (December 14, 1931)
  • One always begins weak (December 17, 1931)
  • A letter to the national sections (December 22, 1931)
  • The CLA role in Europe (December 25, 1931)
  • Personal sympathies and political responsibilities (December 25, 1931)
  • Some historical facts (December 28, 1931)
  • The White Guard preparation of a terrorist act against Comrade Trotsky (December 1931)

1930[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • The Three Factions in the Comintern (1930)
  • Some Results of the Sino-Soviet Conflict (January 3, 1930)
  • Jakob Blumkin Shot by the Stalinists (January 4, 1930)
  • The "Third Period" of the Comintern's Errors (January 8, 1930)
  • A Necessary Supplement (January 9, 1930)
  • "To Patiently Explain" (January 10, 1930)
  • From the Editorial Board (January 20, 1930)
  • A New Step Forward (January 21, 1930)
  • Lessons of the Capitulations (Published February 1930)
  • An Open Letter to All Members of the Leninbund (February 6, 1930)
  • Reply to a Friend's Letter (February 7, 1930)
  • Unifying the Left Opposition (February 8, 1930)
  • Stalin Has Formed an Alliance with Schumann and Kerensky Against Lenin and Trotsky (February 9, 1930)
  • The New Course in the Soviet Economy (February 13, 1930)
  • Yes or No? (March 1, 1930)
  • The Five-Year Plan and World Unemployment (March 14, 1930)
  • Answers to Questions from the USSR (March 1930)
  • Open Letter to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (March 23, 1930)
  • "As Pure and Transparent as Crystal" (March 1930)
  • Three Editorials (April 1930)
  • They Didn't Know (April 1930)
  • The Slogan of a National Assembly in China (April 2, 1930)
  • A Squeak in the Apparatus (April 13, 1930)
  • A Letter to a Lovestoneite (April 16, 1930)
  • A Big Step Forward (April 1930)
  • An Open Letter to the Prometeo Group (April 22, 1930)
  • Toward Capitalism or Socialism? (April 25, 1930)
  • Six Letters to Olberg (January 30 to April 27, 1930)
  • Answer to Graef on Collectivization (Published May 1930)
  • Forgetful Myasnikov (Published May 1930)
  • Problems of the Italian Revolution (May 14, 1930)
  • With Marxist Spectacles (May 16, 1930)
  • A Progress Report to the USSR (May 23, 1930)
  • What Is Centrism? (May 28, 1930)
  • The Revolution in India, Its Tasks and Dangers (May 30, 1930)
  • Toward the Sixteenth Congress of the CPSU (May 31, 1930)
  • Reply to Comrade K. (June 1930)
  • Notes of a Journalist (Published June 1930)
  • The Valuable Work of F. Dingelstedt (June 1930)
  • The New Masses as "Defender" of the October Revolution (June 10, 1930)
  • The Sources of Manuilsky and Company (June 1930)
  • To the Editorial Board of Prometeo (June 19, 1930)
  • Circular Letter Number One (June 21, 1930)
  • An Intolerable Situation (June 21, 1930)
  • Capriciousness in the Editing of Our Press (June 21, 1930)
  • No Limits on Any Party Member (June 26, 1930)
  • Circular Letter Number Two (June 29, 1930)
  • How the ILO Is Doing (1930)
  • Stalin and His Agabekov (July 1930)
  • Stalin as a Theoretician (July 15, 1930)
  • Preliminary Comments on the Sixteenth Congress (July 25, 1930)
  • Who Will Prevail? (Published August 1930)
  • Notes of a Journalist (Published August 1930)
  • A Letter to Hungarian Comrades (August 1, 1930)
  • Proposal for an Open Letter (August 6, 1930)
  • World Unemployment and the Soviet Five-Year Plan (August 21, 1930)
  • Two Letters to China (August 22 and September 1, 1930)
  • Greetings to La Verite (August 25, 1930)
  • Notes of a Journalist (Published September 1930)
  • Another Letter to Hungarian Comrades (September 17, 1930)
  • The Internal Situation of the French League (September 25, 1930)
  • Physical Attack, Slander, and Provocation (October 1930)
  • On Convoking a European Conference (October 1930)

1932-1933[edit source]

1932[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • The "Uprising” of November 7, 1927 (January 2, 1932)
  • A Letter to the Politburo (January 4, 1932)
  • The Left Opposition and the Right Opposition (Published January 1932)
  • Internal Polemics and the Party Press (January 5, 1932)
  • Reply to the Jewish Group in the Communist League of France (January 15, 1932)
  • No Deal with German Government (January 23, 1932)
  • Is Stalin Weakening or the Soviets? (January 1932)
  • For Collaboration Despite Differences (February 10, 1932)
  • Answers to Questions by the New York Times (February 15, 1932)
  • From a Letter to Simon and Schuster (February 26, 1932)
  • Interview by the Associated Press (February 26, 1932)
  • Interview by the United Press (February 29, 1932)
  • On Being Deprived of Soviet Citizenship (March 1, 1932)
  • A Correction on Rakovsky (March 15, 1932)
  • A Word of Welcome to Osvobozhdenie (March 29, 1932)
  • I See War with Germany (Published April 1932)
  • The Left Social Democrats (April 12, 1932)
  • On a Political Novel (April 13, 1932)
  • Answers to Questions by the Chicago Daily News (April 23, 1932)
  • "The Foundations of Socialism" (May 1932)
  • A Reply to May Day Greetings (May 4, 1932)
  • "Blocs" and Absurdities (May 6, 1932)
  • The Labor Party Question in the United States (May 19, 1932)
  • International and National Questions (May 19, 1932)
  • Who Should Attend the International Conference? (May 22, 1932)
  • To the Communist League of Struggle (May 22, 1932)
  • To a Bulgarian Worker in the U. S. (May 24, 1932)
  • Closer to the Proletarians of the "Colored" Races! (June 13, 1932)
  • The Coming Congress Against War (June 13, 1932)
  • Why I Signed Radek's Theses on Germany (June 14, 1932)
  • The Stalin Bureaucracy in Straits (June 16, 1932)
  • A Letter to the Workers of Zurich (June 25, 1932)
  • Hands Off Rosa Luxemburg! (June 28, 1932)
  • An Appeal for the Biulleten (July 1932)
  • On Demyan Bedny (July 1932)
  • Declaration to the Antiwar Congress at Amsterdam (July 25, 1932)
  • Pilsudskism, Fascism, and the Character of Our Epoch (August 4, 1932)
  • Intensify the Offensive! (August 6, 1932)
  • Three Letters to Lazar Kling (February 9-August 7, 1932)
  • Perspectives of the Upturn (August 18, 1932)
  • A Conversation with Trotsky (August 25, 1932)
  • Greetings to the Polish Left Opposition (August 31, 1932)
  • Fourteen Questions on Soviet Life and Morality (September 17, 1932)
  • Peasant War in China and the Proletariat (September 22, 1932)
  • "Do Not Ask So Long" (September 22, 1932)
  • From the Archives (September 1932)
  • A Proposal to an American Editor (Published October 1932)
  • For a Strategy of Action, Not Speculation (October 3, 1932)
  • Preface to the Polish Edition of Lenin's Left-Wing Communism, an Infantile Disorder (October 6, 1932)
  • Zigzags and Eclectic Nonsense (October 7, 1932)
  • Fifteen Years! (October 13, 1932)
  • The Twelfth Plenum of the Comintern (October 13, 1932)
  • A Letter to Weisbord (October 13, 1932)
  • The Lesson of Mill's Treachery (October 13, 1932)
  • The Expulsion of Zinoviev and Kamenev (October 19, 1932)
  • On Field and Weisbord (October 20, 1932)
  • The Soviet Economy in Danger (October 22, 1932)
  • Leninism and Stalinism (October 1932)
  • Greetings to The Militant (November 1, 1932)
  • Perspectives of American Marxism (November 4, 1932)
  • To Friends in Frankfurt (November 5, 1932)
  • Mill as a Stalinist Agent (November 12, 1932)
  • Field's Future Role (November 13, 1932)
  • Stalin Again Testifies Against Stalin (Autumn 1932)
  • A Suppressed Speech of Lenin (Autumn 1932)
  • To Greek Friends En Route to Copenhagen (November 19, 1932)
  • Press Statement at Marseilles (November 21, 1932)
  • Press Statement on Leaving Dunkirk (November 22, 1932)
  • Press Statement on Reaching Esbjerg (November 23, 1932)
  • An Interview by Social- Demokraten (November 23, 1932)
  • An Interview by Politiken ( November 23, 1932)
  • Radio Message to the United States (November 27, 1932)
  • Questions for Communists (November 1932)
  • To an Unknown Comrade (November 1932)
  • Literary Projects and Political Considerations (November 1932)
  • On Students and Intellectuals (November 1932)
  • A Bolshevik-Leninist Declaration on Comrade Trotsky's Journey (November 1932)
  • Answers to Journalists' Questions (December 3, 1932)
  • An Open Letter to Vandervelde (December 5, 1932)
  • A Telegram to Herriot (December 7, 1932)
  • Press Statement at Brindisi (December 8, 1932)
  • Press Statement at Istanbul (December 11, 1932)
  • Appendix
  • Interview on "Proletarian Literature" by Maurice Parijanine (April 1932)
  • Other Writings of 1932

1933-1934[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • It Is Impossible to Remain in the Same "International" with Stalin, Manuilsky, Lozovsky and Company (July 20, 1933)
  • A Necessary Clarification (July 26, 1933)
  • For New Communist Parties and the New International (July 27, 1933)
  • Even Slander Should Make Some Sense (August 5, 1933)
  • Is Soviet Policy a Matter on Which Only Russian Socialists Are Competent to Decide? (August 9, 1933)
  • An Organ of Finance Capital on "Trotskyism" (August 13, 1933)
  • Declaration of the Bolshevik-Leninist Delegation at the Conference of Left Socialist and Communist Organizations (August 17, 1933)
  • More Urgent Needs for Fund Raising (August IS, 1933)
  • The German Opposition and the SAP Should Unite (August 18, 1933)
  • How to Handle Slanders and Insinuations (August 18, 1933)
  • The Declaration of Four (August 26, 1933)
  • Whither the Independent Labour Party? (August 28, 1933)
  • An Interview by C. A. Smith (August 29, 1933)
  • On the Conference of Left Socialist and Communist Organizations Held at Paris, August 27-28, 1933 (August 31, 1933)
  • The Paris Conference: A Firm Nucleus for a New International (September 1, 1933)
  • Stalin Prepares a Treacherous Blow (September 1, 1933)
  • How to Influence the ILP (September 3, 1933)
  • The ILP and the New International (September 4, 1933)
  • Success or Failure? (September 10, 1933)
  • Principled Considerations on Entry (September 16, 1933)
  • It Is Time to Stop (Published September 18, 1933)
  • About the United Front with Grzezinsky . . . (September 20, 1933)
  • The USSR and the Comintern (September 24, 1933)
  • The Fate of the British Section (September 25, 1933)
  • The Class Nature of the Soviet State (October 1, 1933)
  • To Dispel Misunderstandings (October 2, 1933)
  • The Lever of a Small Group (October 2, 1933)
  • Private Opinions and Public Statements (October 2, 1933)
  • A False Understanding of the New Orientation (October 8, 1933)
  • Doubts, Hesitations and Fears (Autumn 1933)
  • On the Saar Question (Published November 4, 1933)
  • Our Present Tasks (November 7, 1933)
  • Maria Reese and the Comintern (November 10, 1933)
  • Answers to Questions by Anita Brenner (November 13, 1933)
  • Hitler the Pacifist (November 23, 1933)
  • A Political Trial Without a Political Axis (November 26, 1933)
  • Nationalism and Economic Life (November 30, 1933)
  • Contribution Toward a Discussion on the Basic Theoretical Conceptions of the International Communist League (December 4, 1933)
  • Notes of a Journalist (December 12, 1933)
  • A Conference of the Bloc of Four (December 30, 1933)
  • Anatole Vasilievich Lunacharsky (January 1, 1934)
  • Cardinal Questions Facing the ILP (January 5, 1934)
  • Revisionism and Planning (January 9, 1934)
  • The SAP, the ICL and the Fourth International (January 11, 1934)
  • Are There No Limits to the Fall? (January 18, 1934)
  • On the Eve of the Seventeenth Congress (January 20, 1934)
  • A Real Achievement (January 24, 1934)
  • The Responsibility of Translators (February 20, 1934)
  • Centrism and the Fourth International (February 23, 1934)
  • France Is Now the Key to the Situation (Published March 1934)
  • Rakovsky's Declaration of Submission (Published March 10, 1934)
  • The Red Army (March 13, 1934)
  • A Centrist Attack on Marxism (March 16, 1934)
  • Once More on Centrism (March 23, 1934)
  • Greetings to La Verita (March 25, 1934)
  • The Proposed Fusion in the United States (March 29, 1934)
  • The Meaning of Rakovsky's Surrender (March 31, 1934)
  • The Crisis of the Greek Section (April 5, 1934)
  • Behind Rakovsky's Capitulation (April 19, 1934)
  • Off With All the Blindfolds! (Published April 27, 1934)
  • Conversation with a Dissident from Saint-Denis (Published June 8, 1934)
  • Arguments and Rebuttals (Published June 8, 1934)
  • War and the Fourth International (June 10, 1934)
  • Appendix: Leon Trotsky by Andre Malraux

1934-1935[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • The foreign policy of the Soviet Union (Published June 16, 1934)
  • A program of action for France (Published June 1934)
  • The League faced with a turn (June 1934)
  • The League faced with a decisive turn (June 1934)
  • The state of the League and its tasks (June 29, 1934)
  • Greetings to The New International' (July 1934)
  • The evolution of the SFIO (July 10, 1934)
  • Bonapartism and fascism (July 15, 1934)
  • Cross the Rubicon (July 16, 1934)
  • The Stalinists and organic unity (July 19, 1934)
  • Supplementary arguments and suggestions for articles (July 21, 1934)
  • Tasks of the ICL (July 21, 1934)
  • Clouds in the Far East (Published August 1934)
  • Summary of the discussion (August 6, 1934)
  • The task of revolutionary teachers (August 10, 1934)
  • To the Bolshevik-Leninists in the USSR (Published August 17, 1934)
  • If America should go communist (August 17, 1934)
  • The way out (August 1934)
  • On the theses 'Unity and the Youth' (Summer 1934)
  • An advocate takes up a position on the French situation (September 22, 1934)
  • The 'Belgian' tradition in discussion (September 22, 1934)
  • To the Ukrainian comrades in Canada (October 20, 1934)
  • Austria, Spain, Belgium and the turn (November 1, 1934)
  • How to answer the London-Amsterdam Bureau (November 1934)
  • No compromise on the Russian question (November 11, 1934)
  • On Bonapartism (Marxism is superior) (Published December 1, 1934)
  • Once more on our turn (December 15, 1934)
  • On the SAP's proposals (December 1934)
  • The Stalinist bureaucracy and the Kirov assassination (December 28, 1934)
  • The indictment (December 30, 1934)
  • Statement to the press (December 30, 1934)
  • Some results of the Stalin amalgam (January 12, 1935)
  • The case of Zinoviev, Kamenev and others (January 16-18, 1935)
  • Everything gradually falls into place (January 26, 1935)
  • Where is the Stalin bureaucracy leading the USSR? (January 30, 1935)
  • The workers' state, Thermidor and Bonapartism (February 1, 1935)
  • 'Soviet democracy' (February 11, 1935)
  • To Comrade Sneevliet on the IAG conference (February 26, 1935)
  • To Cannon on the next steps (February 1935)
  • Centrist combinations and Marxist tactics (February 28, 1935)
  • Again on the question of Bonapartism (March 1935)
  • The Belgian dispute and the de Man plan (March 2, 1935)
  • From a letter to the Chinese comrades (March 5, 1935)
  • From the CGT's plan to the conquest of power (Delivered March 18-19, 1935)
  • The situation in the Stockholm Youth Bureau (March 23, 1935)
  • A new noose in the Stalinist amalgam (March 31, 1935)
  • Notes of a journalist (Published April 1935)
  • The situation in France and the tasks of the Bolshevik-Leninist Group of the SFIO (April 15, 1935)
  • On the South African theses (April 20, 1935)
  • Centrist alchemy or Marxism? (April 24, 1935)
  • News about the family (April 25, 1935)
  • Stalinist treason in THumanite' (Published April 26, 1935)
  • Laval and the French CP ( May 1935)
  • Toward the new youth international (Spring 1935)
  • Stalin has signed the death certificate of the Third International (Published May 25, 1935)
  • To the students of Edinburgh University (June 7, 1935)
  • The Seventh Congress of the Comintern (June 7, 1935)
  • Three telegrams to Norway (June 7-12, 1935)
  • An open letter to the workers of France (June 10, 1935)
  • A new turn is necessary (June 10, 1935)
  • Discipline must be restored (June 13, 1935)
  • Appendix: Trotsky's clandestine activity at Domene, by Pierre Broue

1935-1936[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • Open Letter for the Fourth International (Spring 1935)
  • Luxemburg and the Fourth International (June 24, 1935)
  • The SAP and the Open Letter (July 2, 1935)
  • For a Special Information Service (July 2, 1935)
  • “World Party of Social Revolution” (July 14, 1935)
  • The Italo-Ethiopian Conflict (Published July 17, 1935)
  • For Defense of Soviet Revolutionaries (July 17, 1935)
  • Perspectives in Poland (July 18, 1935)
  • To Young Communists and Socialists Who Wish to Think (July 22, 1935)
  • A Report in Arbeiderbladet (Published July 26, 1935)
  • Who Defends Russia? Who Helps Hitler? (July 29, 1935)
  • Oehlerism and the French Experience (August 11, 1935)
  • A Cancer in the Workers Party (August 12, 1935)
  • Preface to P.J. Schmidt’s Article on Holland (August 12, 1935)
  • An Appeal to Oehlerite Comrades (August 13, 1935)
  • Letter to the German Commission (August 19, 1935)
  • The Comintern’s Liquidation Congress (August 23, 1935)
  • To the Editors of Action Socialiste Revolutionnaire (August 23, 1935)
  • A Case for a Labor Jury (August 29, 1935) * Published here in English for the first time.
  • An Appeal (Published September 1935)
  • How History and Biography Are Written (Published September 1935)
  • Letter to the Emigre Committee of the IKD (September 2, 1935)
  • The Terror of Bureaucratic Self-Preservation (September 6, 1935)
  • The Revolutionary Internationalists Need Our Help! (September 7, 1935)
  • The Stalinist Turn (September 7, 1935)
  • Russia and the World Proletariat (September 14, 1935)
  • The ILP and the Fourth International (September 18, 1935)
  • For Practical Steps Toward Rapprochement (October 11, 1935)
  • Sectarianism, Centrism, and the Fourth International (October 22, 1935)
  • Romain Rolland Executes an Assignment (October 31, 1935)
  • Lessons of October (November 4, 1935)
  • How Did Stalin Defeat the Opposition? (November 12, 1935)
  • A Venerable Smerdyakov (November 1935)
  • Two Statements on the Cannon-Shachtman Letter * A Brief Remark (November 1935)
  • An Obvious Error (November 13, 1935) 182
  • Factions and the Fourth International (1935)
  • An Answer to Comrades in Anvers (November 1935)
  • Tactical Questions and Splits (November 18, 1935)
  • Once Again the ILP (November 1935)
  • Advice on Canadian Farmers (November 1935)
  • Remarks in Passing (December 8, 1935)
  • On the Postcard Amalgam (December 15, 1935)
  • Request for a Month’s Leave of Absence (December 27, 1935)
  • For a Lucid Explanation (December 30, 1935)
  • Developments in the USSR (December 31, 1935)
  • The Class Nature of the Soviet State (January 1, 1936)
  • Foreign Communists in Danger (January 2, 1936)
  • Notes of a Journalist (January 10, 1936)
  • On the Soviet Section of the Fourth International (January 11, 1936)
  • Bourgeois Democracy and the Fight Against Fascism (January 13, 1936)
  • Stalin’s Revolutionary Prisoners (January 15, 1936)
  • Questions of a British Group (January 15, 1936) For Entry in the U.S.
  • Letter to Cannon and Shachtman (January 24, 1936)
  • Letter to A.J. Muste (January 24, 1936)
  • Letter to Jack Weber (January 24, 1936)
  • Stalin Frame-Up Mill at Work (January 30, 1936)
  • A Crisis in the Workers Party (February 6, 1936)
  • Letter to A.J. Muste (February 8, 1936)
  • Statement to Associated Press (February 8, 1936)
  • Some Advice to a British Group (March 7, 1936)
  • How to Work in the SP (March 9, 1936)
  • The Stalin-Howard Interview (March 18, 1936)
  • “The Point of No Return” (Published April 1936)
  • Once Again on the Soviet Section (Published April 1936)
  • An Honest Book (March 21, 1936)
  • The Plan to Exterminate the Bolshevik-Leninists (March 25, 1936)
  • Suggestions for the Belgian Section (March 27, 1936)
  • Open Letter to a British Comrade (April 3, 1936)
  • A Good Omen for Joint Work in Britain (April 9, 1936)
  • The New Constitution of the USSR (April 16, 1936)
  • In the Columns of Pravda (Published May 1936)
  • On Dictators and the Heights of Oslo (April 22, 1936)
  • How to Win the Socialist Youth (April 27, 1936)
  • Political Persecution in the USSR (May 22, 1936)
  • The Spiciest Dishes Are Still to Come (Published May 1936)
  • On Comrade Ciliga’s Articles (June 3, 1936)
  • The New Revolutionary Upsurge and the Tasks of the Fourth International (July 1936)
  • To the Public Opinion of the Workers of the Whole World (July 4, 1936)
  • How the Workers in Austria Should Fight Hitler (Published July 1936)
  • For Calm and Objective Work (July 6, 1936)
  • The Fourth International and the Soviet Union (July 8, 1936)
  • For a Common Goal in Britain (July 13, 1936)
  • The Dutch Section and the International (July 15-16, 1936)
  • Interview on British Problems (August 1936)
  • Let Us Know the Facts (August 15, 1936)
  • Open Letter to the Oslo Chief of Police (August 19, 1936)
  • Worse Than Dreyfus and Reichstag Cases (August 19, 1936)
  • Who Is V. Olberg? (August 20, 1936)
  • Individual Terror and Mass Terror (August 20, 1936)
  • A Revolutionary, Not a Terrorist (August 21, 1936)
  • A Miniature Edition of the Moscow Indictment (August 21, 1936)
  • A Revealing Episode (August 22, 1936)
  • Statement on the Trial (August 23, 1936)
  • Tomsky’s Suicide (August 23, 1936)
  • Some Facts for the Prague Committee (August 23, 1936)
  • Stalin Is Not Everything (August 23, 1936)
  • Interview in News Chronicle (August 24, 1936)
  • An Answer to Mr. Scharffenberg (August 24, 1936)
  • The Death Sentences (August 24, 1936)
  • Regular Trial Demanded (August 25, 1936)
  • A Letter to Trygve Lie (August 26, 1936)
  • Trials Without End (August 27, 1936)
  • Letter to Mr. Puntervold (September 15, 1936)
  • Echoes of a Belgian Witch-hunt (September 23, 1936)
  • Letters to an Attorney (September-October 1936)
  • Comments on Defense Efforts (October 3, 1936)
  • The Safety of the Archives (October 10, 1936)
  • Letter to the IFTU (October 22, 1936)
  • Letter to the League of Nations (October 22, 1936)
  • Letters to an Attorney (late October 1936)
  • Remarks About the Arbeiderbladet Interview (November 10, 1936)
  • On the GPU’s Theft of Archives (November 10, 1936)
  • Letters to an Attorney (November 1936)
  • Letter to the League for the Rights of Man (Published November 30, 1936)
  • Letters to an Attorney (December 1936)
  • In Closed Court (December 11, 1936)
  • For the Earliest Possible Departure from Norway (December 16, 1936)
  • Valuable Time Is Being Lost (December 17, 1936)
  • Shame! (December 18, 1936)
  • A Formal Declaration (December 18, 1936)
  • Last Letter from Europe (December 18, 1936)

1936-1937[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • In “Socialist” Norway (December 1936)
  • On the Atlantic (December 28, 1936)
  • A Significant Episode (December 30, 1936)
  • Zinoviev and Kamenev (December 31, 1936)
  • Why They Confessed Crimes They Had Not Committed (January 1, 1937)
  • “Thirst for Power” (January 3, 1937)
  • “Hatred of Stalin” (January 4, 1937)
  • Notes En Route (January 5, 1937)
  • On Sending Terrorists into the USSR (January 6, 1937)
  • In Mexico (January 9, 1937)
  • Statements in Tampico (January 9, 1937)
  • A Telegram to New York (January 11, 1937)
  • To the Representatives of the Mexican Press (January 12, 1937)
  • The Soviet Bureaucracy and the Spanish Revolution (January 13, 1937)
  • An Interview for Americans (January 16, 1937)
  • Letter to the Daily Herald (January 18, 1937)
  • Interview with the Jewish Daily Forward (January 18, 1937)
  • Greetings to James P. Cannon (January 20, 1937)
  • Seventeen New Victims of the GPU (January 20, 1937)
  • A New Moscow Amalgam (January 21, 1937)
  • The New Trial (January 22, 1937)
  • The Truth Behind the “Voluntary Confessions” (January 23, 1937)
  • Why This Trial Seemed Necessary (January 23, 1937)
  • Whose Conspiracy? (January 23, 1937)
  • Not a Single Word Is True (January 24, 1937)
  • On Romm (January 24, 1937)
  • The Depositions and First Testimony of the Defendants (January 24, 1937)
  • Rakovsky (January 25, 1937)
  • During the Moscow Trial (January 25, 1937)
  • The GPU at Work on the International Front (January 25, 1937)
  • The “Voluntary” Confessions of the Defendants (January 26, 1937)
  • "Industrial Sabotage (January 26, 1937)
  • The Conspiracy’s Financial Resources (January 26, 1937)
  • Muralov (January 26, 1937)
  • Pyatakov’s Phantom Flight to Oslo (January 27, 1937)
  • A Fighter for Fundamental Justice (January 27, 1937)
  • The Arrest of Sergei Sedov (January 27, 1937)
  • Stalin’s Version and Radek’s (January 28, 1937)
  • Appeal to the League of Nations (January 1937)
  • "“Prosecutor Vyshinsky (January 29, 1937)
  • "“Will the Defendants Be Executed? (January 29, 1937)
  • Pyatakov’s Story Vague on Time, Place (January 29, 1937)
  • Stalin in Partial Retreat (January 29, 1937)
  • The Organization of the Trial (January 30, 1937)
  • The Last Words of the Accused (January 30, 1937)
  • "“Anti-Semitic Devices (January 30, 1937)
  • "“Speech for a Newsreel (January 30, 1937)
  • "“Thirteen Are to Die (January 31, 1937)
  • "“Those Who Have Been “Spared” (January 31, 1937)
  • "“Kaganovich Anticipates My End (January 31, 1937)
  • "“The “People” Call for Punishment (January 31, 1937)
  • Why Did the GPU Choose December and Norway? (January 31, 1937)
  • The End? (February 1, 1937)
  • "“For Justice in the Swiss Courts (Published. February 1937)
  • Two Statements on Hearst (Published February 3 and 19, 1937)
  • Against Pessimism (February 3, 1937)
  • An Inconprehensible Polemical Sally by Mr. Troyanovsky (February 4, 1937)
  • No Participation in Mexican Politics (February 4, 1937)
  • An Interview with Madame Titayna (February 11, 1937)
  • A Telegram to Chicago (February 14, 1937)
  • Romm Frequented Dark Paris Alleys (February 15, 1937)
  • For Depositions of the Facts (February 16, 1937)
  • Contact with the Molinierists (February 18, 1937)
  • For Depositions from American Visitors (February 20, 1937)
  • Max Eastman as Interpreter (February 23, 1937)
  • "Two Announcements (February 25, 1937)
  • Romm’s Evidence (February 25, 1937)
  • Statement on Senin and Well (February 27, 1937)
  • On the Subject of Jacques Sadoul (March 5, 1937)
  • Fenner Brockway, Pritt No. 2 (March 6, 1937)
  • A Press Statement on Andre Malraux (March 8, 1937)
  • For a Move to New York (March 9, 1937)
  • Dangerous Symptoms in New York (March 9, 1937)
  • Deposition on the Theft of Archives (March 10, 1937)
  • The Havas Interview on Spain (March 12, 1937)
  • Some Concrete Questions for Mr. Malraux (March 13, 1937)
  • For the Immediate Creation of the Committee of Inquiry (March 15, 1937)
  • The Sine Qua Non for Further Collaboration (March 15, 1937)
  • The Attitude of Our Comrades in the Committee (March 15, 1937)
  • “The First Two Moscow Trials” (March 15, 1937)
  • To the Socialist Lawyers’ Front (March 15, 1937)
  • American City: An Irreplaceable Book (March 15, 1937)
  • A Mockery of Justice (March 16, 1937)
  • On Defense Work in France (March 17, 1937)
  • The Policy of Our Comrades in the Committee (March 17, 1937)
  • Two Telegrams (March 19 and 22, 1937)
  • More Evidence Needed to Refute Pyatakov’s Lies (March 26, 1937)
  • On Defense of the USSR (March 26, 1937)
  • More on Pyatakov’s Flight (March 28, 1937)
  • The Preliminary Inquiry at Coyoacan (Spring 1937)
  • Next Steps for the Committee of Inquiry (April 20, 1937)
  • The Agrarian Question in Bolivia (April 24, 1937)
  • “"Answers to the Jewish Daily Forward (April 27, 1937)
  • The Trial of the Danzig Trotskyists (April 29, 1937)
  • Two Manifestations of the Same Tendency (May 12, 1937)
  • Mr. Beals as a Witness (May 18, 1937)
  • To the Third Congress of the French JSR (May 22, 1937)
  • Answers to the Associated Press (May 22, 1937)
  • A “Critical” Adaptation to Centrism (May 25, 1937)
  • Molinier’s Organization (May 26, 1937)
  • The Questions That Separate Us (May 26, 1937)
  • A Militant, Revolutionary, and Critical Marxist Review Is Needed (May 29, 1937)
  • Stalin on His Own Frame-Ups (June 1937)
  • The Beginning of the End (June 12, 1937)
  • For the Creation of a National Weekly (June 12, 1937)
  • The Situation in the SP and Our Next Tasks (June 15, 1937)
  • The Decapitation of the Red Army (June 17, 1937)
  • Telegram to the CEC of the USSR (June 17, 1937)
  • The Time Factor in Politics (June 25, 1937)
  • Preface to Les Crimes de Staline (July 5, 1937)
  • The Questions of Wendelin Thomas (July 6, 1937)
  • Answers to the Committee on Cultural Relations with Latin America (July 27, 1937)
  • Preface to the Spanish Edition of The Revolution Betrayed (August 5, 1937)
  • On the Threshold of a New World War (August 9, 1937)
  • About the Article on War (August 10, 1937)
  • Wolf Weiss’s Novel (August 13, 1937)
  • Interview by Mexico al Dia (August 16, 1937)
  • Interview by Sunday Sun of Sydney (August 17, 1937)
  • Answers to the New York Herald-Tribune (August 23, 1937)
  • “"American Problems and the International (August 26, 1937)
  • Stalinism and Bolshevism (August 28, 1937)
  • To Discredit Stalinism in the Eyes of the Workers (September 2, 1937)
  • London Bureau Aids Stalin Frame-Ups by Refusal to Join Probe Commission (September 5, 1937)
  • The Purpose of the Inquiry Commission (September 5, 1937)
  • More Pedagogical Patience Toward New Elements (September 11, 1937)
  • For a Regime of Genuine Democracy (September 11, 1937)
  • Replies to United Press (September 13,. 1937)
  • For a Sense of Responsibility in the Party Discussion (September 18, 1937)
  • Catastrophe Seen for Japan (September 20, 1937)
  • A Tragic Lesson (September 21, 1937)
  • Reply to Selden Rodman (September 22, 1937)
  • The Arrest of Erwin Wolf (September 25, 1937)
  • An Observer from Afar (September 27, 1937)
  • Terrorist Occurrences in France (September 29, 1937)
  • A Letter to New York (September 30, 1937)
  • Concern About Mrs. Reiss (September 30, 1937)
  • Answers to Questions (October 1, 1937)
  • Optimistic for the Future (October 2, 1937)
  • More Thoughts on the Party Regime (October 3, 1937)
  • Problems of Personnel (October 4, 1937)
  • For a Public Meeting of the Dewey Commission (October 6, 1937)
  • Results of the Entry and Next Tasks (October 6, 1937)
  • The Social Composition of the Party (October 10, 1937)
  • A Letter to Elsa Reiss (October 13, 1937)
  • The Future of the Trotsky Defense Committee (October 14, 1937)
  • To the Editor of Modern Monthly (October 15, 1937)
  • Perspectives for the Future and the International Conference (October 19, 1937)
  • Swiss Police Arrest Assassins (October 19, 1937)
  • Erwin Wolf: A Victim of the GPU (October 19, 1937)
  • Dictatorship and Revolution (October 23, 1937)

1937-1938[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • Ninety Years of the Communist Manifesto (October 30, 1937)
  • It Is High Time to Launch a World Offensive Against Stalinism (November 2, 1937)
  • Once Again: The USSR and Its Defense (November 4, 1937)
  • An “Attempt” on Stalin’s Life (November 4, 1937)
  • America’s Sixty Families (November 8, 1937)
  • Letter on American Problems (November 14, 1937)
  • Letter to Comrade Wasserman (November 14, 1937)
  • Coming Trials to Reveal Secret Plans of GPU (November 16, 1937)
  • How to Struggle Against War (November 17, 1937)
  • Bertram Wolfe on the Moscow Trials (November 25, 1937)
  • Not a Workers’ and Not a Bourgeois State? (November 25, 1937)
  • For a Revolutionary Publishing House (November 29, 1937)
  • Moscow-Amsterdam “Unity” (November 29, 1937)
  • An FBI Agent’s Story (December 1, 1937)
  • A Few Words on Lutte Ouvriere (December 2, 1937)
  • The Future of the Dutch Section (December 2, 1937)
  • A Letter to the New York Times (December 3, 1937)
  • ^Defeatism vs. Defensism (December 6, 1937)
  • A Suggestion on Burnham (December 6, 1937)
  • On Democratic Centralism (December 8, 1937)
  • Two Defections in One Week (December 9, 1937)
  • Telegram to the Dewey Commission (December 9, 1937) *Published here in English for the first time.
  • Statement to Journalists on the Dewey Verdict (December 13, 1937)
  • Permission to Use Articles (December 14, 1937)
  • How to Conduct a Political Discussion (December 15, 1937)
  • Letter to the New International (December 15, 1937)
  • Greetings to Norway (December 19, 1937)
  • Answers to Questions of Marianne (December 20, 1937)
  • ^Intellectuals and the Party Milieu (December 21, 1937)
  • Letter to Australians (December 23, 1937)
  • The Spanish Lesson for the Fourth International (December 24, 1937)
  • For a Permanent Defense Committee (December 30, 1937)
  • On Modern Monthly (December 31, 1937)
  • Letter on Defeatism (January 2, 1938)
  • Does the Soviet Government Still Follow the Principles Adopted Twenty Years Ago? (January 13, 1938)
  • Hue and Cry Over Kronstadt (January 15, 1938)
  • Sneevliet’s Role (January 21, 1938)
  • Open Letter to De Nieuwe Fakkel (January 21, 1938)
  • Conclusion of a Long Experience (January 21, 1938)
  • An Excellent Article on Defeatism (January 26, 1938)
  • Factory Papers and a Theoretical Journal (January 27, 1938)
  • The Ludlow Amendment (February 1, 1938)
  • Letter to an American Youth (February 4, 1938)
  • Optimistic over the Future (February 4, 1938)
  • A New GPU Attempt (February 15, 1938)
  • The Possibility of Foul Play (February 18, 1938)
  • Leon Sedov — Son, Friend, Fighter (February 20, 1938)
  • After Sedov’s Death (February 22, 1938)
  • A Fresh Attack on Asylum (February 24, 1938)
  • The Trial of the Twenty-One (February 28, 1938)
  • Eight Ministers (March 1, 1938)
  • Strange New Developments (March 1 , 1938)
  • Trial Seen as Reply to Dewey Commission (March 2, 1938)
  • To the Attention of Thinking People (March 3, 1938)
  • Behind the Moscow Trials (March 3, 1938)
  • Four Doctors Knew Too Much (March 3, 1938)
  • The Secret Alliance with Germany (March 3, 1938)
  • Corrections and Observations on the Testimony of the Accused (March 4, 1938)
  • The “Million Dollars” (March 5, 1938)
  • Army Opposed to Stalin (March 6, 1938)
  • Why So Many Centers? Why Do They All Submit to Trotsky? (March 6, 1938)
  • The Role of Yagoda (March 7 , 1938)
  • Anachronisms (March 8, 1938)
  • Moscow’s Diplomatic Plans and the Trials (March 8, 1938)
  • Stalin’s Article on World Revolution (March 9, 1938)
  • Message to New York Protest Meeting (March 9, 1938)
  • A Key to the Russian Trials (March 10, 1938)
  • The Case of Professor Pletnev (March 10, 1938)
  • Letter to Jeanne Martin (March 10, 1938)
  • The Defendants Zelensky and Ivanov (March 11, 1938)
  • Again on the Reiss Case (March 12, 1938)
  • Hitler’s Austria Coup Aided by Moscow Trial (March 12, 1938)
  • On Hearst (March 13, 1938)
  • An Explanation for Freda Kirchwey (March 13, 1938)
  • Notes in the Margin of Pravda’s Accounts (March 1938)
  • Cain-Dzhugashvili Goes the Whole Way (March 17, 1938)
  • A Reply to Ambassador Bilmanis (March 17, 1938)
  • New Defectors (March 17, 1938)
  • The Priests of Half-Truth (March 19, 1938)
  • Discussions with Trotsky: I — The International Conference (March 20, 1938)
  • Discussions with Trotsky: II — Defense Organization and Attitude Toward Intellectuals (March 24, 1938)
  • Discussions with Trotsky: III — The Russian Question (March 25, 1938)
  • Roosevelt’s Statement on Trotskyists in Russia (March 29, 1938)
  • Letter to the League of Nations (March 31, 1938)
  • For the Reorganization of the Mexican Section (April 15, 1938)
  • Toward a Genuine British Section (April 15, 1938)
  • Letter to James P. Cannon (April 15, 1938)
  • Thoughts on the French Section (April 19, 1938)
  • More on European Problems (April 20, 1938)
  • The Mexican Oil Expropriations (April 23, 1938)
  • Europe or San Francisco? (May 12, 1938)
  • For an Immediate Trip to Europe (May 16, 1938)
  • On C.L.R. James (May 17, 1938)
  • Learn to Think (May 22, 1938)
  • 0nce More on Comrades Sneevliet and Vereecken (May 24, 1938)
  • No Obstacle to Common Vote (May 25, 1938)
  • “For” the Fourth International? No! the Fourth International! (May 31, 1938)
  • Revolutionary Art and the Fourth International (June 1, 1938)
  • Remarks on Czechoslovakia (June 2, 1938)
  • Mexico and British Imperialism (June 5, 1938)
  • On the Edge of a Precipice (June 12, 1938)
  • No, It Is Not the Same (June 18, 1938)
  • To the Congress of the Revolutionary Socialist Party of Belgium (June 22, 1938)
  • For an Open Polemic with the Liberals (June 29, 1938)
  • Stalin and Accomplices Condemned (July 5, 1938)
  • More on the Suppression of Kronstadt (July 7, 1938)
  • For Freedom in Education (July 10, 1938)
  • On the Anniversary of Reiss’s Death ( July 17, 1938)
  • To the Conference of the Young People’s Socialist League (July 18, 1938)
  • The Disappearance of Rudolf Klement (July 18, 1938)
  • Was Leon Sedov Murdered? (July 19, 1938)
  • My Conspiracy (July 19, 1938)
  • ^Financing the Revolutionary Movement (July 23, 1938)
  • The Forthcoming Trial of the Diplomats (July 25, 1938)
  • A “Letter” from Rudolf Klement (August 1, 1938)
  • On the Fate of Rudolf Klement (August 3, 1938)
  • The Sino-Japanese Struggle (August 11, 1938)
  • The USSR and Japan (August 11, 1938)
  • Answers to the Questions of Lloyd Tupling (August 12, 1938)
  • Freedom of the Press and the Working Class (August 21, 1938)
  • Further Evidence of GPU Guilt in Sedov Death (August 24, 1938)
  • Trade Union Congress Staged by CP (August 27, 1938)
  • The Congress Against War and Fascism (August 1938)
  • Fascism and the Colonial World (August 1938)
  • A Great Achievement (August 30, 1938)
  • Another Stalinist Ploy (September 4, 1938)
  • The Totalitarian Defeatist in the Kremlin (September 12, 1938)
  • Letter to Rose Karsner (September 13, 1938)
  • Yes or No? (September 14, 1938)
  • “Toward a Decision” (September 17, 1938)

1938-1939[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • Phrases and Reality (September 19, 1938)
  • The Totalitarian "Right of Asylum" (September 19, 1938)
  • The Assassination of Rudolf Klement (September 20, 1938)
  • Fight Imperialism to Fight Fascism (September 21, 1938)
  • After the Collapse of Czechoslovakia, Stalin Will Seek Accord with Hitler (September 22, 1938)
  • Anti-Imperialist Struggle Is Key to Liberation (September 23, 1938)
  • Problems of the American Party (October 5, 1938)
  • What Is the Meaning of the Struggle Against "Trotskyism"? (October 9, 1938)
  • A Fresh Lesson (October 10, 1938)
  • To Our Friends and Readers (October 11, 1938)
  • The Problem of a New International (October 11, 1938)
  • Tasks of the Trade Union Movement in Latin America (October 11, 1938)
  • The Founding of the Fourth International(October 18, 1938)
  • To the Editors of Biulleten Oppozitsii, Lutte Ouvriere,and Quatrieme Internationale (October 22, 1938)
  • A False View (October 22, 1938)
  • Two Agents of "Democratic" Imperialism (October 22, 1938)
  • American Prospects (October 24, 1938)
  • A Few Words on Andre Breton (October 27, 1938) Published here in English for the first time.
  • Letter to Andre Breton (October 27, 1938)
  • Letter to James P. Cannon (October 30, 1938)
  • "Peace in Our Time" ? (November 4, 1938)
  • Karl Kautsky (November 8, 1938)
  • Haya de la Torre and Democracy (November 9, 1938)
  • In Defense of Asylum (November 10, 1938)
  • Terrorism and the Murders of Rasputin and Nicholas II (November 14, 1938)
  • The Twenty-First Anniversary (November 14, 1938)
  • A Contribution to Centrist Literature (November 15, 1938)
  • Toward a Revolutionary Youth Organization (November 18, 1938)
  • The Individual in History (1938)
  • Stalin vs. Stalin (November 19, 1938)
  • Reply to Father Coughlin's Charges (November 28, 1938)
  • For an Independent Youth Movement (November 30, 1938)
  • On the Murder of Rudolf Klement (December 1, 1938)
  • Open Letter to Senator Allen (December 2, 1938)
  • Victor Serge and the Fourth International (December 2, 1938)
  • Problems of the Mexican Section (December 5, 1938)
  • A Revolutionary Name for a Revolutionary Youth Group (December 10, 1938)
  • For a Systematic Political Campaign (December 12, 1938)
  • A Political Dialogue (December 20, 1938)
  • Letter to Charles Curtiss (December 24, 1938)
  • Answers to the Lies of the New York Daily News (December 28, 1938)
  • Lenin and Imperialist War (December 30, 1938)
  • To the Pillory! (December 31, 1938)
  • One More Lesson on the Lima Conference (December 31, 1938)
  • To the Readers of Clave (January 1939)
  • Clave and the Election Campaign (January 1939)
  • Two Statements on Family Matters Deposition to the Court (January 15, 1939)
  • A Proposed Biography (January 21, 1939)
  • Jouhaux and Toledano (January 30, 1939)
  • Stalin, Skoblin, and Company (January 30, 1939)
  • Ignorance Is Not a Revolutionary Instrument (January 30, 1939)
  • For Grynszpan (February 1939)
  • Intellectual Ex-Radicals and World Reaction (February 17, 1939)
  • Krupskaya's Death (March 4, 1939)
  • The Betrayers of India (March 4, 1939)
  • What Lies Behind Stalin Bid for Agreement with Hitler? (March 6, 1939)
  • Once Again on the "Crisis of Marxism" (March 7, 1939)
  • A Step Toward Social Patriotism (March 7, 1939)
  • "Learn to Work in the Stalin Manner" (March 7, 1939)
  • Stalin's Capitulation (March 11, 1939)
  • On Mexico's Second Six Year Plan (March 14, 1939)
  • A Proposal from Shanghai (March 18, 1939)
  • Only Revolution Can End War (March 18, 1939)
  • Our Work in the Communist Party (March 20, 1939)
  • The "Kidnaping" of Trotsky's Grandson (March 26, 1939)
  • Fighting Against the Stream (April 1939)
  • On the History of the Left Opposition (April 1939)
  • The Diego Rivera Affair
  • A Necessary Statement (January 4, 1939)
  • The Source of the Problem (January 11, 1939)
  • Letter to Frida Rivera (January 12, 1939)
  • Clave's Statement on Rivera's Resignation (January 17, 1939)
  • Suggestions for a Reply from the Pan-American Committee and the IS (January 1939)
  • Letter to Charles Curtiss (January 18, 1939)
  • Letter to Charles Curtiss (February 14, 1939)
  • Letter to Charles Curtiss (February 15, 1939)
  • Letter to the Pan-American Committee (March 22, 1939)
  • Letter to James P. Cannon (March 27, 1939)
  • Statement of the Pan-American Committee (April 5, 1939)
  • More on Our Work in the Communist Party (April 10, 1939)
  • Greetings to Carlo Tresca (April 10, 1939)
  • The Ukrainian Question (April 22, 1939)
  • Letter to Emrys Hughes (April 22, 1939)
  • The Crisis in the French Section
  • Letter to James P. Cannon (December 5, 1938)
  • Letter to James P. Cannon (April 8, 1939)
  • Letter to the Political Committee of the SWP (April 18, 1939)
  • Letter to the Political Committee of the SWP (April 22, 1939)
  • Letter to the International Secretariat (July 27, 1939)
  • On Laborde and Trotskyists in General (April 28, 1939)
  • The Bonapartist Philosophy of the State (May 1, 1939)
  • Nationalized Industry and Workers' Management (May 12, 1939)
  • A Graphic History of Bolshevism (June 7, 1939)
  • Ten Years (June 10, 1939)
  • Soviet Plutarchs (June 10, 1939)
  • Toward a Balance Sheet of the Purges (June 10, 1939)
  • 1917-1939 (June 10, 1939)
  • For a Courageous Reorientation (June 16, 1939)
  • The Riddle of the USSR (June 21, 1939)
  • The Kremlin in World Politics (July 1, 1939)

1939-1940[edit source]

Supplement 1929-1933[edit source]

  • Preface
  • Turkey (1929-33)
  • Interview by the Daily Telegraph (March 14, 1929)
  • Help the Imprisoned Bolshevik-Leninists (March 20, 1929)
  • Interview Given to the Social Democratic Press (March 24, 1929)
  • Tactics in the USSR (October 1929)
  • Our French Press (October-November 1929)
  • Economic Necessity Helps Those Who Help Themselves (Late 1929)
  • Discussions with Max Shachtman (March 1930)
  • Progressives in the United Mine Workers (March 15, 1930)
  • Prospects of the Communist League of America (March 26, 1930)
  • The Mute Conference (April 16, 1930)
  • More About Comrade Blumkin (Published May 1930)
  • G. Mannoury and the Comintern (Published May 1930)
  • Stalin’s “Reply to Collective Farm Comrades” (Published May 1930)
  • Official Deceit and the Truth (Published May 1930)
  • Bureaucratic Tendencies (June 20, 1930)
  • The French Leadership (June 30, 1930)
  • We Should Proceed as Democratically as Possible (August 18, 1930)
  • To the Bolshevik-Leninist Organization of Greece (Archio-Marxists) (October 1930)
  • Personal Elements in the French Struggle (November 25, 1930)
  • Every Group Should Take a Clear Stand (December 19, 1930)
  • To Alfonso Leonetti on the French Section (February 5, 1931)
  • You Should Help the New Leadership (February 11, 1931)
  • Miliukov and the February Revolution (February 25, 1931)
  • Writings of Leon Trotsky: Supplement (1929-33)
  • Andres Nin and Victor Serge (Published March 1931)
  • The International Secretariat and the International Bureau (March 7 , 1931)
  • To Preserve Our Politics from Degeneration (March 13, 1931)
  • National Conferences First (April 2, 1931)
  • Will Help New Publishing House (April 4, 1931)
  • What a Control Commission Should Do (May 1, 1931)
  • The First Lesson from Spain (May 1, 1931)
  • Part of the Responsiblility for the German Split (May 23, 1931)
  • The Bordigist Line (June 10, 1931)
  • Miscellaneous Information (July 1, 1931)
  • The Secondary Place of Personal Characteristics (July 5, 1931)
  • Irresponsible Types (August 2, 1931)
  • The French Discussion (August 20, 1931)
  • Rosmer’s Politics (September 1, 1931)
  • Discussions with Albert Glotzer (October-November 1931)
  • To Help in Britain (November 9, 1931)
  • What Is Fascism? (November 15, 1931)
  • Better to Seek the Solid (November 30, 1931)
  • Why Mill Should Be Removed (December 29, 1931)
  • The Kind of Secretariat We Need (January 27, 1932)
  • Two Pamphlets (February 8, 1932)
  • The Weekly Comes First (February 10, 1932)
  • Bordiga and Social Fascism (February 14, 1932)
  • When Ultraleftists Can Be More Correct (March 6, 1932)
  • On an Entry into the SAP (March 8, 1932)
  • Our Strength Is in Clarity (March 23, 1932)
  • The American Dispute and International Questions (May 1, 1932)
  • Worried About Spain (May 13, 1932)
  • International and National Questions (May 19, 1932)
  • Our Attitude to Weisbord (May 27, 1932)
  • Murphy’s Expulsion (May 27, 1932)
  • Shachtman’s “Character” (June 3, 1932)
  • Query About a Shop Paper (June 9, 1932)
  • Proposals for the Antiwar Congress (June 9, 1932)
  • A Discussion on Greece (Spring 1932)
  • After the CLA Plenum (July 4, 1932)
  • Permanent Factionalism Is Not Needed (July 4, 1932)
  • Hope for CLA Unity (July 18, 1932)
  • A Discussion with Herbert Solow (Summer 1932)
  • Willing to Speak in Copenhagen (August 28, 1932)
  • After the British Expulsions (September 6, 1932)
  • Minutes of the Commission: I (September 18, 1932)
  • Minutes of the Commission: II (September 23, 1932)
  • The Poverty of Our European Sections (October 4, 1932)
  • A Duty to Speak (October 10, 1932)
  • Minutes of the Commission: III (October 28, 1932)
  • “Down with Stalin” Is Not Our Slogan (Autumn 1932)
  • A Left Opposition Statement Should Be Prepared (Autumn 1932)
  • Documents from Copenhagen (November 1932)
  • Answers to Personal Questions (December 16, 1932)
  • Memorandum on a Forgery in Spain (December 19, 1932)
  • The International Preconference (January 15, 1933)
  • A Possible Lecture Tour (February 1, 1933)
  • Greetings to the German Bolshevik-Leninists (February 2, 1933)
  • A Possible Visa for France (February 8, 1933)
  • Reply to an Invitation ( February 15, 1933)
  • What Is Happening in Germany? (February 22, 1933)
  • The Struggle in the CLA (February 27, 1933)
  • The Situation in Germany (March 2, 1933)
  • A Personal Letter on the CLA (March 7, 1933)
  • Don’t Forget We Have an International Organization (March 8, 1933)
  • In These Uncertain Times (March 8, 1933)
  • To the National Council of Labour Colleges (March 10, 1933)
  • Advice for the CLA Minority (March 14, 1933)
  • The German Decision Against a New Party (March 19, 1933)
  • A Congress Against Fascism (March 23, 1933)
  • Complaints to the IS (March 28, 1933)
  • We Must Have a Discussion on Germany (April 3, 1933)
  • Tasks of the Coming Plenum (April 12, 1933)
  • Errors of the Spanish Leaders (April 12, 1933)
  • Intellectuals Regrouping (April 13, 1933)
  • A Magnificent School (April 14, 1933)
  • Circulating an Illegal Paper (April 18, 1933)
  • The Discussion on Germany (April 21, 1933)
  • A Nucleus Outside (April 27, 1933)
  • Recommendations to the IS (April 29, 1933)
  • Writings of Leon Trotsky: Supplement (1929-33)
  • A French Visa and an Essay on Herriot (April 30, 1933)
  • A Warning and a Criticism (May 1, 1933)
  • Tact, Caution, and Flexibility (May 8, 1933)
  • Paralyzed Financially (May 11, 1933)
  • Problems with a Publisher (May 14, 1933)
  • Suggestions for the Congress (May 26, 1933)
  • What I Would Do in France (May 31, 1933)
  • Fraction Work in the Social Democracy (Summer 1933)
  • Interview by Alice Hughes (July 4, 1933)
  • Restructuring the IS (July 5, 1933)
  • Southern France and Corsica (July 7, 1933)
  • Dangers Threatening the CLA (July 10, 1933)
  • New Questions Will Produce New Alignments (July 12, 1933)
  • France (1933-35)
  • Full-Time Staff (July 30, 1933)
  • A Decisive Turn Is Necessary and Urgent (July 31, 1933)
  • Barbusse’s Cynicism (July 31, 1933)
  • A Plenum is Needed to Deal with the Paris Conference (August 7, 1933)
  • Remarks on the French League’s Theses (August 8, 1933 )
  • Moving to France (August 11, 1933)
  • Documents for the Conference (August 12, 1933)
  • To Jacob Walcher on the Declaration of Four (August 21, 1933)
  • Reassuring the Polish Section (August 22, 1933)
  • The ILP and the British Section (August 22, 1933)
  • Information for the U.S. (August 22, 1933)
  • Building a New International and the United Front Policy (August 24, 1933)
  • “As It Is” and “As It Should Be” (August 26, 1933)
  • A Discussion with Pierre Rimbert (September 2, 1933)
  • After Talks with Fritz Sternberg (September 4, 1933)
  • Roosevelt’s Experiment and Workers’ Control (September 6, 1933)
  • Planned Economy in the USSR: Success or Failure? (September 7, 1933)
  • Soliciting Suggestions (September 9, 1933)
  • Trouble in the French Section (September 11, 1933)
  • In Defense of the IS (September 18, 1933)
  • Trade Union Problems in America (September 23, 1933)
  • Attempts to Revive the Control Commission’s Corpse (September 27, 1933)
  • Proposed Statutes for the Plenum of the IS (September 27, 1933)
  • Comrade Witte’s Violations of Bolshevik Organizational Principles (September 28, 1933)
  • Lozovsky, Strategist of the Proletarian Revolution (Published October 1933)
  • On the Projected Youth Conference (October 6, 1933)
  • Respect for Political Logic (November 2, 1933)
  • Man’s Fate Is a True Work of Art (November 9, 1933)
  • Answers to Questions from New York (November 13, 1933)
  • Comments on the Active-Socialist Front (November 13, 1933)
  • After the British Municipal Elections (November 14, 1933)
  • Minutes of the ICL Plenum (November 18-19, 1933)
  • Youth Conference Plans (November 21, 1933)
  • On Calling for Soviets in Cuba (November 21, 1933)
  • For United Action Against Fascism (November 22, 1933)
  • Bad News About the CLA (November 25, 1933)
  • Intervening in the SP (November 26, 1933)
  • Preface and Postscript, Abridged Edition of Ma Vie (December 4, 1933)
  • Minutes, the Conference of Four of December 30, 1933
  • Notes
  • Partial Contents of the 12-Volume Writings of Leon Trotsky (1929-40)

Supplement 1934-1940[edit source]

  • France (1934-35)
  • An Offer to Le Peuple (January 9, 1934)
  • The IS Reply to the British Majority (January 23, 1934)
  • Differences with the British Minority (January 23, 1934)
  • The Jewish Question Has Been Internationalized (January 28, 1934)
  • Questions About Holland (January 29, 1943)
  • On the Workers’ Militia (February 1934)
  • Things Are on the Move (February 12, 1934)
  • Against Centrism at the Youth Conference (February 15, 1934)
  • Rakovsky’s Statement of Submission (February 21, 1934)
  • Ultraleft Tactics in Fighting the Fascists (March 2, 1934)
  • After the Austrian Defeat (March 13, 1934)
  • Reproaching the Dutch Section (March 17, 1934)
  • Field’s Expulsion (March 18, 1934)
  • A Concert for Herriot (March 1934)
  • The Youth Conference’s Unsatisfactory Resolution (March 19, 1934)
  • The Proposal to Fuse the CLA and the AWP (March 20, 1934)
  • The Errors of Our Youth Delegates (March 29, 1934)
  • Continuing the Struggle Through Unifications (April 10, 1934)
  • My Interrogation by the Police (Mid-April 1934)
  • Why I Am Being Expelled from France (April 18, 1934)
  • Suggestions for a French Program of Action (Spring 1934)
  • Proposals for the Next ICL Plenum (June 15, 1934)
  • Our Response to the French CP’s New Turn (June 16, 1934)
  • Concentrate Inside the Socialist Party (June 1934)
  • The State of the League and Its Tasks (June 29, 1934)
  • The Catalan Conflict and the Tasks of the Proletariat (Summer 1934)
  • Alternatives for the Young Socialists (July 12, 1934)
  • Writings of Leon Trotsky: Supplement (1933-40)
  • Cross the Rubicon (July 16, 1934)
  • The Stalinists and Organic Unity (July 19, 1934)
  • Supplementary Arguments and Suggestions for Articles (July 21, 1934)
  • Tasks of the ICL (July 21, 1934)
  • Clouds in the Far East (Published August 1934)
  • Soviets in America? (August 17, 1934)
  • The “Belgian” Tradition in Discussion (September 22, 1934)
  • The Present Situation in the Labor Movement and the Tasks of the Bolshevik-Leninists (October 1934)
  • Cannon’s Mission in Europe (November 3, 1934)
  • How to Answer the London-Amsterdam Bureau (November 1934)
  • No Compromise on the Russian Question (November 11, 1934)
  • We Should Join the Belgian Young Socialists (November 19, 1934)
  • Suggestions for the GBL (November 20, 1934)
  • Remarks on the Kirov Assassination (December 10, 1934)
  • On the Draft Political Statutes (December 1934)
  • A Few Remarks on Revolution (December 1934)
  • Once More on Our Turn (December 15, 1934)
  • Notes on the GBL’s Internal Problems (Late 1934 or Early 1935)
  • Remarks on Our General Orientation (Late 1934 or Early 1935)
  • The State and the USSR (Late 1934 or Early 1935)
  • Against Desistance For the Radicals (Late 1934 or Early 1935)
  • Answers to Questions by Louise Bryant (Late 1934 or Early 1935)
  • A Proposal to Co-opt Dubois into the Plenum (January 31, 1935)
  • Disturbing Signs (January 31, 1935)
  • After the Belgian Conference (March 24, 1935)
  • On the Teachers’ Federation (March 24, 1935)
  • Notes on the SAP and the London-Amsterdam Bureau (Mid-April 1935)
  • News About the Family (April 25, 1935)
  • Laval and the French CP (May 1935)
  • Toward the New Youth International (Spring 1935)
  • Why Are We Bolshevik-Leninists? (Spring 1935)
  • Three Telegrams to Norway (June 7-12, 1935)
  • Underground Work in Nazi Germany (June 1935)
  • Norway (1935-36)
  • Please Pay Attention to the Youth Question (June 21, 1935)
  • Chen Tu-hsiu and the General Council (August 10, 1935)
  • For a Bloc Against Oehler (August 13, 1935)
  • The Cannon Shachtman Group Should Make Concessions (September 4, 1935)
  • The Policy of the Abem- Weber Group (September 4, 1935)
  • Nothing in Common with the Decadent Comintern (September 18, 1935)
  • An Appeal to A.J. Muste (September 24-25, 1935)
  • The Open Letter and the ILP (Autumn 1935)
  • Foreword, Mitt Liv (October 1, 1935)
  • For or Against? (October 16, 1935)
  • Youth Secretary Nominations (October 21, 1935)
  • Support of the Dutch Fight Against SAPism (November 5, 1935)
  • Conversations with Earle Bimey (November 1935)
  • Greetings to Robitnichi Vysti (November 26, 1935)
  • Letters About Anton Ciliga (December 1935-January 1936)
  • The Lenin-Trotsky Papers (December 28, 1935)
  • Results of the Open Letter (January 18, 1936)
  • Schmidt’s Trip to England (January 19, 1936)
  • Educating Against Centrism (January 24, 1936)
  • The Heyday of the People’s Front (January 24, 1936)
  • Two Statements on Hearst (January 28, 1936)
  • A Conversation with Maurice Spector (February 1936)
  • How to Avert a Split (February 8, 1936)
  • Remarks for an English Comrade (April 8, 1936)
  • The Center Must Stay in Europe (April 8, 1936)
  • Orient to the Spanish Youth (April 14, 1936)
  • Eleven Letters to Victor Serge (April- August 1936)
  • Our Kind of Optimism (April 27, 1936)
  • Walter Held’s Thesis on the Evolution of the Comintern (May 26 and June 18, 1936)
  • Let’s End This Nonsense (May 28, 1936)
  • “State Capitalism” Data Sought (June 7 , 1936)
  • The International Conference and the Dutch Section (June 16, 1936)
  • Writings of Leon Trotsky: Supplement (1933-40)
  • Congratulations on a Good Publishing Job (June 18, 1936)
  • The London Bureau and the Fourth International (July 1936)
  • Deep Differences with the Dutch Comrades (July 7, 1936)
  • How the Conference Was and Wasn’t Prepared (July 17, 1936)
  • Molinier’s Expulsion (July 1936)
  • When the Conference Selects the Leadership (July 24, 1936)
  • Advice for the Conference (July 25, 1936)
  • GPU and Gestapo (August 27, 1936)
  • A Possible Hunger Strike (End of August 1936)
  • Our Friends Should Not Wait (End of August 1936)
  • Translator Troubles, Publisher Problems (September 10, 1936)
  • Still Imprisoned (October 4, 1936)
  • Still Gagged (October 12, 1936)
  • The Trip to Copenhagen (October 12, 1936)
  • Reading Ibsen Again (October 1936)
  • Pyatakov and the Trial in Novosibirsk (November 26, 1936)
  • Posthumus and the Archives (December 2, 1936)
  • Mexico (1937-40)
  • Answers to a Mexican Press Service (January 23, 1937)
  • Two Crooked Lawyers (February 1, 1937)
  • Postponing the Swiss Trial (February 19, 1937)
  • Answers to the Chicago Daily News (March 3, 1937)
  • A Correction and Requests (March 26, 1937)
  • Stalin’s Latest Threat (March 29, 1937)
  • Opinions and Information (May 12, 1937)
  • Obstacles in Britain (May 21, 1937)
  • No Reason to Complain (August 10, 1937)
  • Literary Theft (August 21, 1937)
  • A Pamphlet on Spain (September 17, 1937)
  • The International Conference Must be Postponed (September 25, 1937)
  • The U.S. Recession and a New Political Orientation (October 2, 1937)
  • An Article on Kronstadt (November 14, 1937)
  • Suggestions for a Pamphlet on Kronstadt (November 19, 1937)
  • An Article on the Soviet State (November 30, 1937)
  • Sale of the Archives (December 21, 1937)
  • Kronstadt and the Commission’s Findings (January 17, 1938)
  • Thomas’s Letter and Dewey’s Speech (January 26, 1938)
  • Eastman and The Young Lenin (February 3, 1938)
  • Explanation of a Complaint (February 5, 1938)
  • Why I Can’t Pay Now (February 7, 1938)
  • Jules Romains on Lenin (February 7, 1938)
  • Marx’s Living Thoughts (February 10, 1938)
  • Leon Sedov’s Papers (February 28, 1938)
  • Questions About Sedov’s Death (March 1, 1938)
  • Krestinsky’s Repudiation (March 2, 1938)
  • The Third Moscow Trial (March 4, 1938)
  • Answers to Mrs. Celarie (March 6, 1938)
  • Roosevelt and a Visa (March 30, 1938)
  • Carlo Tresca Is a Target (March 31, 1938)
  • Finishing the Transitional Program (April 5, 1938)
  • A Russian Encyclopedia (April 26, 1938)
  • Political Personality and the Milieu (May 10, 1938)
  • Muenzenberg’s Expulsion (June 5, 1938)
  • Molinier and the International Conference (June 9, 1938)
  • An Introduction Worthy of Rosa Luxemburg (June 14, 1938)
  • Fusion With the Lovestoneites? (July 29, 1938)
  • Answers to Gladys Lloyd Robinson (August 18, 1938)
  • Isaacs’s Book About China (October 23, 1938)
  • Latin American Problems: A Transcript (November 4, 1938)
  • Lombardo Toledano’s Lies (November 8, 1938)
  • Can the Daily News be Sued? (November 11, 1938)
  • A Conversation with William R. Mathews (Published December 13, 1938)
  • Investigate the U.S. Fascists (December 12, 1938)
  • The French Question (December 13, 1938)
  • Letters About Sieva Volkov (September 1938-April 1939)
  • No Doubts About Rudolf Element's Fate (November 1938-August 1939)
  • A GPU Stool Pigeon in Paris (January 1, 1939)
  • The Hearst Press Changes Its Mind (January 6, 1939)
  • The Plight of Our Refugee Comrades (January 9, 1939)
  • What the Youth Do to Our Principles (January 9, 1939)
  • Letters to the POI Central Committee (February- July 1939)
  • A Trap in Palestine (February 14, 1939)
  • Money-Raising Appeals (February 20, 1939)
  • Writings of Leon Trotsky: Supplement (1933-40)
  • Utilize the Opportunities in the Communist Party (March 8, 1939)
  • James’s Trip to Mexico (March 29, 1939)
  • Diego Rivera’s Defection (March-April 1939)
  • Where Munis Should Go ( May 1, 1939)
  • Pan-American Committee Personnel (May 1, 1939)
  • Victor Serge’s Crisis (May 6, 1939)
  • Another Anonymous Letter (May 10, 1939)
  • Problems of the Socialist Appeal (May 27, 1939)
  • A Visa for Elsa Reiss (June 5, 1939)
  • A Party Census (June 23, 1939)
  • For the Ukrainian Pamphlet (September 1939)
  • A Disagreeable Incident (September 7, 1939)
  • The First Article in the Russian Discussion (September 28, 1939)
  • Accepting the Invitation of the Dies Committee (October 12, 1939)
  • Outline of a Magazine Article (November 15, 1939)
  • A False Report (December 26, 1939)
  • Dialectics and the Answer to Burnham (January 9, 1940)
  • Farrell Dobbs’s Arrival (January 16, 1940)
  • A Discussion With Carleton Smith (Published February 2, 1940)
  • Factionalism and the IEC (February- April 1940)
  • Rivera’s Wild Denunciation (April 6, 1940)
  • A Serious Work on Russian Revolutionary History (May 2, 1940)
  • To Colonel Sanchez Salazar (May 31, 1940)
  • A Letter to El Nacional (June 6, 1940)
  • The GPU and the Comintern (August 17, 1940)
  • A Bed and a Plate Waiting ( July 17, 1940)
  • Unfinished Writings and Fragments
  • Petty-Bourgeois Democrats and Moralizers (1938 and 1939)
  • Fragments from the First Seven Months of the War (1940)
  • Fragments on the USSR (1940)
  • Preface to a Book on War and Peace (March-April 1940)
  • Last Words (August 20, 1940)