Offices of Novy Mir
Novy Mir (Russian : Но́вый Ми́ръ , IPA: [ˈnovɨj ˈmʲir] , New World ) was a Russian language socialist newspaper published in the United States during 1911-1938.[ 1]
It was published by Russian social democratic émigrés in New York City in 1911–1917 until their return to Russia after the February Revolution of 1917. Its first editor-in-chief was Leo Deutsch . By 1916 it was edited by Nikolai Bukharin and Alexandra Kollontai , who were briefly joined by Leon Trotsky when he arrived in New York in January 1917. V. Volodarsky , then living in Philadelphia , was one of the contributors.[ 2] [ 3] [ 4]
After the Russian Revolution the newspaper was issued intermittently putting forth varying moderate laborist and leftist politics until 1930s.
References
^ Novyĭ mir ezhednevnai︠a︡ rabochai︠a︡ gazeta.
^ See "A Chronology" in Conversations in Exile: Russian Writers Abroad , ed. John Glad, Duke University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-8223-1298-0 p.275
^ David Shub, "The Russian Press in the United States," The Russian Review, III, No. 1 (1943), 123-124.
^ Jerome Davis, The Russian Immigrant (New York, 1922), pp. 124-126.