Hicks was a highly-influential
Marxist literary critic in the 1930s who was well known for his involvement in a number of celebrated causes, including his well-publicized resignation from the
Communist Party USA in 1939. He established his reputation as an important
literary critic with the 1933 publication of
The Great Tradition: An Interpretation of American Literature since the Civil War, a systematic history of American literature from a Marxist perspective. In 1932, he voted for the Communist Party ticket and joined almost all the significant
Communist front groups in the 1930s. In 1934, Hicks joined the Communist Party itself and became editor of its cultural magazine,
The New Masses. In 1935, Hicks was dismissed from his teaching position at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, which he claimed to be politically motivated, although school officials denied it. He continued to teach at various institutions but devoted more and more of his time to writing. In 1936, Hicks was asked to co-write
John Reed: The Making of a Revolutionary, a biography of radical journalist
John Reed. Communist Party General Secretary
Earl Browder pressured Hicks to remove several passages that reflected negatively on the
Soviet Union but in the end the book was praised for its even-handed and unbiased presentation. 1939 In 1939, in protest against the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Hicks resigned from the Communist Party. He attempted to organize an independent left-wing alternative organization but with little success. By 1940, he had entirely renounced Communism and termed himself a
democratic socialist. That same year, he wrote an essay for
The Nation, "The Blind Alley of Marxism". In the 1950s, Hicks testified before the
House Un-American Activities Committee twice. In a 1951 essay in
Commentary, he explained that Communism "permits of no neutrality" as the "liquidation of neutrals is one of its specialties", and that its aim is "brutal revolutionary
totalitarianism". ==Writer and publisher==