Selected Writings By Harry Haywood
- Harry Haywood, The South Comes North in Detroit's Own Scottsboro Case. League of Struggle for Negro Rights, New York: 1930s.
- Harry Haywood, Black Bolshevik: Autobiography of an Afro-American Communist. Liberator Press, Chicago: 1978.
- Harry Haywood, Negro Liberation. International Publishers, New York: 1948. 245 pages. (later edition from Liberator Press, Chicago: 1976.
- Harry Haywood, For a Revolutionary Position on the Negro Question. Liberator Press, Chicago: 1975. 38 pages. (Written in 1957)
- Harry Haywood, On the Negro Question. 1959 (Under the name of Cyril Briggs). Available in: Towards Victorious Afro-American National Liberation: A Collection of Pamphlets, Leaflets and Essays Which Dealt In
- Timely Way With the Concrete Ongoing Struggle for Black Liberation Over the Past Decade and More. A Ray O. Light Publication, Bronx: 1982. pp. 383–403
Read more about this topic: Harry Haywood
Famous quotes containing the words selected, writings and/or harry:
“The final flat of the hoes approval stamp
Is reserved for the bed of a few selected seed.”
—Robert Frost (18741963)
“Even in my own writings I cannot always recover the meaning of my former ideas; I know not what I meant to say, and often get into a regular heat, correcting and putting a new sense into it, having lost the first and better one. I do nothing but come and go. My judgement does not always forge straight ahead; it strays and wanders.”
—Michel de Montaigne (15331592)
“It is now many years that men have resorted to the forest for fuel and the materials of the arts: the New Englander and the New Hollander, the Parisian and the Celt, the farmer and Robin Hood, Goody Blake and Harry Gill; in most parts of the world, the prince and the peasant, the scholar and the savage, equally require still a few sticks from the forest to warm them and cook their food. Neither could I do without them.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)