From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Internationalen masthead, 1976

Internationalen (the Swedish language name of " The Internationale") is a Swedish Trotskyist weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party.

History and profile

The newspaper was established in 1971 originally by the name Mullvaden ("the Mole") as a monthly magazine, but it changed its name to Internationalen in 1974 when it became a weekly magazine. The earlier name is derived from a Shakespeare quotation which Marx used in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. In act 1, scene 5 of Hamlet, Hamlet himself cries out "Well said, old mole!"

Internationalen has approximately 2000 subscribers.

One of the paper's most famous journalists was Stieg Larsson who published articles there in the 1980s. [1]

References

  1. ^ Jan-Erik Pettersson (31 March 2011). Stieg: From Activist to Author. Quercus Publishing. p.  34. ISBN  978-0-85738-270-2. Retrieved 18 January 2015.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Internationalen masthead, 1976

Internationalen (the Swedish language name of " The Internationale") is a Swedish Trotskyist weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party.

History and profile

The newspaper was established in 1971 originally by the name Mullvaden ("the Mole") as a monthly magazine, but it changed its name to Internationalen in 1974 when it became a weekly magazine. The earlier name is derived from a Shakespeare quotation which Marx used in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. In act 1, scene 5 of Hamlet, Hamlet himself cries out "Well said, old mole!"

Internationalen has approximately 2000 subscribers.

One of the paper's most famous journalists was Stieg Larsson who published articles there in the 1980s. [1]

References

  1. ^ Jan-Erik Pettersson (31 March 2011). Stieg: From Activist to Author. Quercus Publishing. p.  34. ISBN  978-0-85738-270-2. Retrieved 18 January 2015.

External links


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