Max Nomad

Max Nomad (1881–1973) is the pseudonym of Austrian author and educator Max(imilian) Nacht.[1] In his youth he had espoused militant anarchism and in the 1920s he was a follower of the Bolshevik Revolution. From the 1940s he was for many years a politics lecturer in the USA.

Life

Born in 1881, into a wealthy Jewish family from Buczacz, eastern Galicia, Poland,[2] he was influenced by the thought of anarchist Jan Wacław Machajski. Before World War I, he lived in Austria and attended the University of Vienna. Max, his older brother Siegfried Shlomo Nacht (born in Vienna in 1878; died in 1956) and, sometimes, Senna Hoy in Zürich from 1903 to 1907 edited five volumes of the militant journal Der Weckruf (The Alarm) Siegfried, later Stephen, Nacht emigrated to the United States of America at the end of 1912, Max followed in 1913.[3] He wrote pro-soviet articles in the 1920s using the pen-name Max Nomad. He distanced himself from Stalinism in 1929. Writing in Scribner's Magazine in 1934, he coined the phrase capitalism without capitalists regarding the Soviet Union.

A Guggenheim Fellow in 1937, he became a lecturer in politics and history at New York University, the New School for Social Research and the Rand School.

Works of Max Nomad

Literature

References

  1. Max Nacht Papers at International Institute of Social History
  2. Guide to the Max Nomad Papers at the Tamiment Library, New York University
  3. Siegfried Nacht also used the pen-name Arnold Roller: Der Generalstreik und die soziale Revolution. London 1902 (translated into 17 languages); Der soziale Generalstreik. Berlin 1905; Die direkte Aktion London 1906. Sodatenbrevier, 1906.