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Tamara Deutscher (1 February 1913 – 7 August 1990) was a Polish-British writer and editor who researched the leaders of Soviet Communism, together with her husband Isaac Deutscher . She was born Tamara Lebenhaft in Łódź, in what was then Congress Poland.
TAMARA Deutscher who died on Tuesday [August 7th 1990] at the age of 77, was best known as Isaac Deutscher’s collaborator; and their partnership was indeed very close, never more so than in the years of work that went into Deutscher’s three-volume biography of Leon Trotsky.
The Isaac and Tamara Deutscher Memorial Prize is an annual prize given in honour of historian Isaac Deutscher and his wife Tamara Deutscher for a new book published in English "which exemplifies the best and most innovative new writing in or about the Marxist tradition."
Year [5]WinnerBookPublisher2023Market and Violence. The Functioning of ...Brill2022Gabriel WinantThe Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and ...Harvard University Press20212020The Return of Nature: Socialism and ...Monthly ReviewTamara Deutscher (1913-1990) The death of Tamara Deutscher on 7 August 1990 closes a chapter in Marxist scholarship which began in the early 1930s. It was Isaac Deutscher who began this work as a Polish Communist Oppositionist with his essay on the Moscow Trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev in 1936.
Polish-born British editor, researcher and author, who was the collaborator and wife of the socialist historian Isaac Deutscher. Born Tamara Lebenhaft in Lodz, Russian Poland, on February 1, 1913; died in London, England, on August 7, 1990; married Isaac Deutscher (a social historian); children: one son, Martin.
8 apr 2024 · Tamara Deutscher: 1913-1990. It is with great sadness that we learn of the death of Tamara Deutscher, whose counsel and encouragement have meant so much to this Review over a period of a quarter of a century. In the early and mid sixties the editors felt privileged to be able to call upon the political experience and wisdom of Tamara ...
Tamara Deutscher, 'The Memory that works backwards only...', NLR I/68, July–August 1971. Nadezhda Mandelstam, Hope Against Hope.