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  1. Ygael Gluckstein dit Tony Cliff, né le 20 mai 1917 en Palestine et mort le 9 avril 2000 dans le Grand Londres, est un théoricien marxiste et militant trotskyste . Originaire de Palestine, il est fondateur au Royaume-Uni du Parti socialiste des travailleurs (SWP).

  2. 31 ago 2020 · Tony Cliff – GLI EBREI, ISRAELE E L’OLOCAUSTO. The Jews, Israel and the Holocaust, pubblicato nel maggio 1998 su Socialist Review. Tradotto dall’inglese da Rostrum (agosto 2020). In occasione del recente “accordo” tra Israele e gli Emirati Arabi Uniti, e al di là di alcune differenze di valutazione con l’autore, riteniamo utile ...

  3. 30 lug 2009 · Tony Cliff, April 1990. Tony Cliff was a member of the Socialist Workers Party in Britain, and wrote many previous books. The first volume of this biography, Trotsky: Towards October 1879-1917, was published by Bookmarks in July 1989. His other books include the classic (1974) and two previous political biographies: (1959) and (in three volumes ...

  4. 11 ott 2011 · Two reviews of Ian Birchall, Tony Cliff: A Marxist For His Time (Bookmarks, 2011), £15 What a remarkable man Tony Cliff was. Readers of this journal may find this hardly worth saying, even a slight, but for someone outside that… Continue Reading →

  5. 11 ott 2011 · Two reviews of Ian Birchall, Tony Cliff: A Marxist For His Time (Bookmarks, 2011), £15 What a remarkable man Tony Cliff was. Readers of this journal may find this hardly worth saying, even a slight, but for someone outside that… Continue Reading →

  6. 15 dic 2011 · Ian Birchall, Tony Cliff: A Marxist for his Time (Bookmarks 2011), xi, 664. T ony Cliff’s political activism began in British-occupied Palestine, and after transplantation to Britain in 1946, never ceased through the many subsequent years. This is a remarkable achievement in itself, given the grim years in Cold War Britain, when he was ...

  7. Born in Palestine to Zionist parents in 1917, Ygael Gluckstein became a Trotskyist during the 1930s and played a leading role in the attempt to forge a movement uniting Arab and Jewish workers. At the end of of the Second World war, seeing that the victory of the Zionists was more and more inevitable, he moved to Britain and adopted the pseudonym Tony Cliff.