Sedgwick, Peter Harold (1934-1983) socialist and author
ADMINISTRATIVE/BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY: Peter Sedgwick was born in 1934 and brought up in Liverpool. He gained a scholarship
to Balliol College Oxford where he became a communist, leaving the Communist Party
in 1956 with other members of the early New Left. He then joined the Socialist
Review Group later to become the International Socialists. He wrote brilliantly
for the group’s press, but also involved himself deeply in all the drudgery and
activities of the rank rank-and and-file members. He was always a free spirit
and was bitterly opposed to the International Socialism group renaming itself
as the Socialist Workers Party in 1976, refusing to join the new organisation
while always remaining a man dedicated to the far left.
Peter's magnum opus "Psychopolitics" was a critque of the discourse of mental
health movements, and encompassed analyses of Foucault, Goffman, RD Laing and
Szasz. He was also the translator of Victor Serge's Memoirs of a Revolutionary and Year One of the Russian Revolution, and was editing the correspondence between Leon Trotsky and Serge at the time
of his death.
SCOPE AND CONTENT: Papers of Peter Sedgwick (1934-1983), including:
- correspondence with contemporaries and friends including Raphael Samuel, Jean
McCrindle, Anna Davin, Luke Hodgkin, Stanley and Hannah Mitchell, Steven Lukes
and others, 1953-1983
- photocopies of Sedgwick's handwritten diaries, 1980-1983
- family, biographical and personal papers, 1934-1952
- published articles, reviews and papers regarding politics, psychology and Victor
Serge, 1963-1984.
QUANTITY: 5 Boxes
NOTE: This Collection is CLOSED at present