- Home
- George Novack

George Novack
George Novack (1905–1992) joined the communist movement in the United States in 1933 and remained a member and leader of the Socialist Workers Party until his death. As national secretary of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky, Novack helped organize the 1937 International Commission of Inquiry that...
George Novack (1905–1992) joined the communist movement in the United States in 1933 and remained a member and leader of the Socialist Workers Party until his death.
As national secretary of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky, Novack helped organize the 1937 International Commission of Inquiry that investigated the charges fabricated by Stalin’s Moscow trials. In the 1940s Novack was national secretary of the Civil Rights Defense Committee, which gathered support for leaders of the SWP and the Midwest Teamsters’ strikes and organizing drive who were framed up and jailed under the witch-hunting Smith Act. He played a prominent role in numerous other civil liberties and civil rights battles over subsequent decades, including the landmark lawsuit against FBI spying and disruption won by the Socialist Workers Party in 1986. He was also active in defense of the Cuban Revolution and against the war in Vietnam.
His works include: An Introduction to the Logic of Marxism; Genocide against the Indians; The Origins of Materialism; Existentialism versus Marxism; Empiricism and Its Evolution; How Can the Jews Survive? A Socialist Answer to Zionism; The Marxist Theory of Alienation; Democracy and Revolution; Understanding History; Humanism and Socialism; The Revolutionary Potential of the Working Class; Pragmatism versus Marxism; America’s Revolutionary Heritage; and Polemics in Marxist Philosophy.