We intend to be arrogant, impertinent, in bad taste, but not vulgar...to attack old systems, old morals, old prejudices...to set up new ones in their places....Bound by no creed or theory of social reform, we will express them all, providing they be radical. -The Masses, 1913
WORKS PICTURED 10 Tage, die die Welt erschütterten, 1927 cover
John Reed
WORKS BURNED Ten Days that Shook the World (10 Tage, die die Welt erschütterten)
John Reed (1887-1920) was born to a wealthy family in Oregon in 1887. He attended Harvard University, where he began his writing career by serving on the editorial boards of Lampoon and Harvard Monthly. In 1913, in New York City, Reed joined the staff of the leftist periodical The Masses. The following year he participated in the uprising of Pancho Villa in Mexico. In 1917, Reed, a Leninist sympathizer, interviewed the leaders of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. The resulting work, Ten Days that Shook the World, was his most well known. After his return to the United States, he helped found the Communist U.S. Labor Party in 1919 and served as its first chairman. Reed, who had been charged with sedition in the U.S. for articles written for The Masses, was indicted as a Communist leader during the post-World War I "Red Scare." He returned to Russia, where he died from typhus in 1920. Reed was honored as a Soviet hero and buried under the Kremlin wall. Some 13 years later, the Nazis burned his account of the Bolshevik Revolution for its Communist sympathies.