Soviet Russia Since the War

Charlie CHAPLIN   |   Hewlett JOHNSON

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Soviet Russia Since the War
Soviet Russia Since the War

SIGNED BY CHARLIE CHAPLIN AND INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR, THE "RED DEAN" OF CANTERBURY: SOVIET RUSSIA SINCE THE WAR, 1947 FIRST EDITION

(CHAPLIN, Charlie) JOHNSON, Hewlett (Dean of Canterbury). Soviet Russia Since the War. New York: Boni & Gaer, 1947. Octavo, original taupe cloth, original dust jacket.

First edition of Soviet Russia Since the War, inscribed "To —— from Hewlett Johnson / Dean of Canterb. / Los Angeles / Dec — 49" and signed immediately below the inscription, "Charles Chaplin."

Dean of Canterbury from 1931 to 1963, Hewlett Johnson's steadfast championing of Communism, which he considered the best alternative to Fascism, brought him under the surveillance of MI5 and eventually earned him the nickname "The 'Red' Dean of Canterbury." By 1947, Johnson was already well-traveled, having served as chaplain in a camp for German POWs in World War I, visited China in 1932, and gone to Spain in 1937 during the Civil War. In 1945 he was in Moscow during the V.E. Day celebrations and in June of that year met Stalin at the Kremlin where he was awarded the "Order of the Red Banner of Labour." He had written his first book, The Socialist Sixth of the World (1939), at the urging of publisher Victor Gollanz, who asked him to explain Russian Communism to the British public.

Charlie Chaplin did not call himself a communist, but rather a "peacemonger." He is known to have attended functions given by Soviet diplomats in Los Angeles, and the FBI maintained a file on him. Though he publicly protested Senator McCarthy's actions against suspected Communist Party members and was subpoenaed to appear before the House Un-American Activities Committee, he was never called to testify. Chaplin and Johnson apparently met no later than November of 1945 when both attended a talk by Linus Pauling on "Atomic Energy and World Government" for the Hollywood chapter of the Independent Citizen's Committee for the Arts, Sciences, and Professions. In My Autobiography (1964), Chaplin wrote: "There is a strong sense of frankness and sincerity about the English clergy that is a reflection of England at its best. It is men like Dr. Hewlett Johnson… that give vitality to the English Church."

Book fine, some chipping to edges and spine of extremely good dust jacket.

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