

Alan M. Wald, "Bohemian Bolsheviks: Dispatches from the Culture and History of the Left" (Brill, 2025)
Aug 11, 2025
Alan M. Wald, H. Chandler Davis Collegiate Professor Emeritus at the University of Michigan, dives into the complexities of radical politics and literary culture of the American left. He discusses his latest book, exploring the deep commitment to political causes despite challenges. Wald examines the emotional landscape of literature intertwined with leftist thought, the shifting narratives of Jewish identity and activism, and the evolving discourse on Palestinian rights within leftist circles, all while reflecting on the intricacies of personal and ideological commitments.
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Lifelong Literary Commitment
- Alan Wald presents himself as a 79-year-old emeritus professor focused on US literature of the 1930s–50s and the old left.
- He casts decades of archival and interview work as a mission to inspire younger activists.
Origins In Childhood Reading
- Alan Wald traces his political sensibility to childhood reading and encounters with bullying and injustice.
- He credits books like The Fire Eater and Richard Wright for shaping his early political imagination.
Theory Follows Experience
- Wald says theory followed political and literary experience rather than dictating it, combining Marxism, existentialism, and post-colonial thought.
- He used theory to clarify lived practice, not to reduce literature to ideology.