- A. L. Morton
(Arthur) Leslie Morton (1903 - 1987) was a prolific English
Marxist historian. He worked as anindependent scholar ; from 1946 onwards he was the Chair of the Historians Group of theCommunist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). He is best known for his classic "A People's History of England" , but he also did valuable work onWilliam Blake and theRanters , and for the study "The English Utopia".He was born in
Suffolk , and studied at theUniversity of Cambridge from 1921-1924. There he encountered socialist ideas, possibly from thecommunist group that formed aroundMaurice Dobb . Later he taught atA. S. Neill 's schoolSummerhill .He belonged to a group of London left-wing intellectuals of the 1930s, while working as a journalist for the
Daily Worker . His friends at that time includedA. L. Lloyd andMaurice Cornforth ; he assistedVictor B. Neuburg . In 1932 and 1933 he was involved in a debate withF. R. Leavis , in the pages ofScrutiny .His 1938 "A People's History Of England" was adopted quasi-officially as the CPGB national history, and went through later editions on that basis.
He was part of the group of leading communist historians invited to
Moscow in 1954/5, with Christopher Hill,Eric Hobsbawm , and the Byzantine historian Robert Browning.Works
*"A People's History Of England "(1938)
*"Language of Men" (1945) essays
*"The story of the English revolution "(1949) Communist Party pamphlet
*"The English Utopia" (1952)
*"The British Labour Movement, 1770-1920" (1956) withGeorge Tate
*"The Everlasting Gospel: A Study in the Sources of William Blake" (1958)
*"The Life and Ideas of Robert Owen" (1962)
*"The matter of Britain: essays in a living culture" (1966)
*"The World of the Ranters: Religious Radicalism in the English Revolution" (1970)
*"Political Writings of William Morris" (1973) editor
*"Freedom in Arms: A selection of Leveller writings" (1975) editor
*"Collected poems" (1976)
*"Three Works By William Morris" (1977) editor
*"History and the Imagination: Selected Writings of A.L. Morton" (1990) edited byMargot Heinemann andWillie Thompson References
*"Rebels & Their Causes: Essays In Honour Of A. L. Morton" (1978) edited by
Maurice Cornforth
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