- Margot Heinemann
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Margot Claire Heinemann (18 November 1913 – 10 June 1992)[1] was a British Marxist writer, drama scholar, and leading member of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB).
She joined the CPGB in 1934,[1] because of its active opposition to the British Union of Fascists. She was the lover of John Cornford, while a student at the University of Cambridge. The historian Eric Hobsbawm, there also at the time, wrote 'she probably had more influence on me than any other person I have known.'
She was educated at Roedean School and at King Alfred School in London, and read English at Newnham College, Cambridge from 1931 gaining a BA with first class honours.[1] After Cambridge she taught 14-year-old girls at Cadbury's Continuation School in Bourneville on day release from the chocolate factory.[1] In the CPGB she worked in the Labour Research Department from 1937.
She stood as the communist candidate for Vauxhall Constituency in the 1950 General Election.[1]
In 1959 she resumed teaching at Camden School for Girls and then Goldsmith's College from 1965-77.[1] In 1976 she was made a Fellow of New Hall, Cambridge.[1] She was still teaching at New Hall up to 1989 and stayed with the CPGB until it was dissolved.
Personal life
She had a child (Jane, b.1953) with John Desmond Bernal.[2]
Works
- Britain's coal: A Study of the Mining Crisis, Left Book Club, 1944
- Wages Front, 1947, Labour Research Department
- Coal must come first, 1948, prepared for the Labour Research Department
- The Tories and how to beat them, Communist Party, 1951
- The Adventurers, 1960 (novel)
- Britain in the Nineteen Thirties, 1971 (with Noreen Branson)
- Experiments in English Teaching - New Work in Higher and Further Education 1976 (editor with David Craig)
- Culture and Crisis in Britain in the 30s, 1979 (with Jon Clark, David Margolies and Carole Snee)
- Puritanism and Theatre: Thomas Middleton and Opposition Drama under the Early Stuarts, 1980
- History and the Imagination - Selected Writings of AL Morton, 1990 (editor)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g "Website of Graham Stevensonis, National Organiser for Transport for Unite, the union, and a member of the Executive Committee and Political Committee of the Communist Party - site has images of Heinemann. (Based on an obituary in The Independent, June 1992". http://www.grahamstevenson.me.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=264:margot-heinemann-&catid=8:h&Itemid=109.
- ^ Goldsmith, Maurice (1980). Sage: A Life of J D Bernal. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0 09 139550.
- David Margolies and Maroula Joannou, editors (2002) Heart of the Heartless World: Essays in Cultural Resistance in Memory of Margot Heinemann
Categories:- Communist Party of Great Britain members
- 1913 births
- 1992 deaths
- British women writers
- Marxist writers
- Old Roedeanians
- Alumni of Newnham College, Cambridge
- People educated at South Hampstead High School
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