‘The jobless should lead the attack’: a radical Jamaican journalist in 1920s London

“失业者应引领这场斗争”:20世纪20年代伦敦的一位激进牙买加记者

The Audio Long Read

2025-11-14

31 分钟
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Economic insecurity, race riots, incendiary media … Claude McKay was one of the few Black journalists covering a turbulent period that sounds all too familiar to us today By Yvonne Singh. Read by Karl Queensborough. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
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  • A radical Jamaican journalist in 1920s London by Yvonne Singh, read by Carl Queensborough.

  • There was no greater vantage point to see America burn than the Pennsylvania Railroad.

  • Working in the summer of 1919 as a dining car waiter, Claude McKay was so fearful that he had resorted to traveling with a revolver secreted in his starched white jacket.

  • During this volatile time, which became known as the US's Red Summer, a wave of racial violence engulfed the country.

  • In a situation replicated across the Western world, hundreds of thousands of first World War veterans had returned home and were now looking for work.

  • Among them were black troops who had fought for the Allied powers.

  • and hoped that they would be awarded equal rights in return for their service.

  • It was not to be.

  • Competition for labor and jobs would reveal ugly prejudices and trigger a prolonged spell of rioting and lynching across the US.

  • Between April and November 1919, hundreds of people, most of them black Americans, were killed and thousands injured.

  • McKay, a 28-year-old Jamaican immigrant and aspiring poet, was shaken by the violence.

  • It was the first time I had ever come face to face with such manifest, implacable hit of my race, and my feelings were indescribable," he later said.

  • I had heard of prejudice in America, but never dreamed of it being so intensely bitter.

  • The experience would prove formative to his writing.

  • During the Red Summer riots, he wrote the impassioned sonnet, If We Must Die.

  • It was published in 1919 by the New York-based leftist publication, The Liberator, which had been founded by Max Eastman and his sister, Crystal.

  • The powerful verse, acknowledged by one contemporary as the Marseillais of the American Negro, concluded with the lines, It established McKay, who was living in Harlem at the time, as a literary talent.