The subject of this article is an anarchist periodical, not to be confused with the Menshevik magazine of the same name published in Samara in 1916
Golos Truda
Header of the first Russian edition, published August 11, 1917
Type
Monthly/weekly/daily periodical
Publisher
Union of Russian Workers (New York) Anarcho-Syndicalist Propaganda Union / Golos Truda group (Russia)
Founded
New York, 1911
Political alignment
Anarchist
Language
Russian
Ceased publication
1917, 1919
Headquarters
New York (1911–1917) Petrograd (1917–1918) Moscow (1918)
Sister newspapers
The Float
Golos Truda (Russian: Голос Труда, lit. 'The Voice of Labour') was a Russian-language anarchist newspaper.[1] Founded by working-class Russian expatriates in New York City in 1911, Golos Truda shifted to Petrograd during the Russian Revolution in 1917, when its editors took advantage of the general amnesty and right of return for political dissidents. There, the paper integrated itself into the anarchist labour movement, pronounced the necessity of a social revolution of and by the workers, and situated itself in opposition to the myriad of other left-wing movements.
The rise to power of the Bolsheviks marked the turning point for the newspaper however, as the new government enacted increasingly repressive measures against the publication of dissident literature and against anarchist agitation in general, and after a few years of low-profile publishing, the Golos Truda collective was finally expunged by the Stalinist regime in 1929.
^"G.P. Maksimov Papers". iisg.nl. International Institute of Social History. Retrieved March 22, 2009.
GolosTruda (Russian: Голос Труда, lit. 'The Voice of Labour') was a Russian-language anarchist newspaper. Founded by working-class Russian expatriates...
Look up golos in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Golos (Голос), a word for "voice" in various Slavic languages, may refer to: Golos (newspaper), a Russian...
leading role in the country's syndicalist movement – editing the newspaper GolosTruda and organising the formation of factory committees. Following the October...
activity to continue peacefully through the 1920s. The bookshop owned by GolosTruda remained open and published Mikhail Bakunin's collected works, the work...
and the October Revolution. Following the suppression of his newspaper GolosTruda and a series of arrests by the Cheka, Yarchuk became disillusioned with...
anarcho-syndicalist organisation. He soon joined the editorial staff of its newspaper, GolosTruda, and in December 1916, he went on a speaking tour of North American cities...
Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries to leave the body. Through GolosTruda the Harbin Soviet declared itself as the government of the area. On December...
Anarcho-Syndicalist Propaganda and GolosTruda became its mouthpiece. Schapiro joined the editorial staff of GolosTruda. The journal began appearing in...
Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries to leave the body. Through GolosTruda the Harbin Soviet declared itself as the government of the area. On December...
himself. In 1923 Makarenko published two articles on the Gorky Colony (in GolosTruda newspaper and Novimy Stezhkami magazine) and two years later made a public...
anarcho-syndicalist who worked for a time on the staff of the URW's newspaper, GolosTruda (The Voice of Labor), the URW developed close ties with the Industrial...
Rayevsky livied in New York City, serving as editor of GolosTruda ("The Voice of Labour"). GolosTruda was the official newspaper of the Union of Russian...