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・ Workers and Peasants' Socialist Party
・ Workers and Socialist Party
・ Workers and Unemployed Action
・ Workers Autonomous Federation
・ Workers Autonomous Trade Unions Confederation
・ Workers Beer Company
・ Workers Committee for National Liberation – Political Organisation for the Working Class
・ Workers Communist League
・ Workers Communist League (Gitlowites)
・ Workers Compensation Act 1987
・ Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba
・ Workers Compensation Commission of New South Wales
・ Workers Defense Union
・ Workers Democracy Group
・ Workers Democratic Party
Workers Film and Photo League
・ Workers for Freedom
・ Workers Front for Indochina
・ Workers Group of the Russian Communist Party
・ Workers in the Dawn
・ Workers Indoor Arena
・ Workers International Relief
・ Workers International to Rebuild the Fourth International
・ Workers International Vanguard League
・ Workers League (Ireland)
・ Workers League (UK)
・ Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory
・ Workers Left Unity – Iran
・ Workers Nationalist Youth
・ Workers of the world, unite!


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Workers Film and Photo League : ウィキペディア英語版
Workers Film and Photo League
The Workers Film and Photo League was an organization of filmmakers, photographers, writers and projectionists in the 1930s, dedicated to using film and photography for social change.
== History ==

Founded in 1930, the WFPL produced documentaries of the U.S. Labor Movement including the National Hunger marches of 1931 and 1932 and the Bonus March 1932. These newsreels were generally not distributed to mainstream theaters, but shown at party or trade union events. When shown in theaters, they often opened for films produced in Europe or the Soviet Union. In New York, the “Harry Alan Potamkin Film School” was established by the Workers Film and Photo League to train working-class filmmakers.
Initially affiliated with the Workers International Relief, the group first organized to project films at fundraising events for striking workers.
Although the best known chapter of the WFPL was in New York, groups in Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, and other cities created and screened documentaries under the "Film and Photo League" moniker. Nationally, the Film & Photo Leagues emerged as a loosely knit alliance of local organizations that provided leftist visual propaganda. Their efforts during the years of the early Depression helped to define social documentary film and photography as a genre.
Much has been made of the association of the Workers Film and Photo League with the Communist Party, both in the US and abroad. While many members were self identified Marxists and party members, the groups usually functioned independently. They were largely composed of idealists who saw the documentary film as a vital element of the movement for radical social change.
In 1933 "Workers" was dropped from the title and the New York organization became the Film and Photo League. The FPL survived for another year in New York, where its photographers formed the Photo League. Some filmmakers formed an independent private production company, others founded Nykino and some, later, the Frontier Film Group.
In other cities, such as Chicago and Los Angeles, Film and Photo League activities continued throughout the 1930s.

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