Rethinking International Communism: History and Legacies

Rethinking International Communism: History and Legacies

Veranstalter
Research Network "Rethinking International Communism"
Veranstaltungsort
Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK
PLZ
L2 2QP
Ort
Liverpool
Land
United Kingdom
Vom - Bis
02.09.2022 - 03.09.2022
Deadline
20.05.2022
Von
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

Bringing together a range of scholars across disciplinary boundaries, this conference aims to provide a step toward a new global reassessment of international communism.

Rethinking International Communism: History and Legacies

The AHRC-funded research network Rethinking International Communism aims to bring together scholars from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds who are engaged in the study of international communism and the Communist International (Comintern) between the world wars. Taking stock of recent trends in the literature, and examining new research agendas, the network provides a forum to reflect upon the past, the present and the future of Comintern studies.

This two-day conference in Liverpool invites participants to contribute to this reassessment of the history and legacies of the Comintern. We welcome papers of 20 minute duration which explore any aspect of Comintern history, and/or which address the legacies of the Communist International in the post-1945 era.

The conference keynote address will be delivered by Professor Brigitte Studer, Institute of History, University of Bern.

While for many years the history of the Comintern tended to trace a familiar path, with discussion dominated by the ‘centre-periphery’ debate, in more recent times scholarly attention has been increasingly drawn to new problems, informed by new approaches and methodologies. Pathbreaking work has been undertaken in the fields of anti-colonialism and anti-racism, and into the efforts of various Comintern organisations, and individuals, to construct a new international proletarian culture as a necessary step towards global revolution. Researchers too have continued to transform our understanding of the language, symbolism and practices of internationalism within national communist movements and parties. Increasingly, the old paradigms for making sense of the Comintern are proving inadequate. Bringing together a range of scholars across disciplinary boundaries, this conference aims to provide a step toward a new global reassessment of international communism.

Despite the dissolution of the Comintern in 1943, communist internationalism did not, of course, cease. Yet, the Comintern’s disciplined organisational model, and its ‘script for revolution’, appear to have been rapidly jettisoned by those seeking to effect radical political and social change. However, in this field too, scholars have increasingly emphasised important continuities. In contrast to the historical curiosity to which it has long been relegated, researchers have in recent years opened up new paths for understanding both the short and longer term legacies of the Communist International. This has notably been the case in the study of various specific political, social, cultural and aesthetic campaigns and movements in the post-1945 era which, at least in part, owed their existence to Comintern organisations and activists.

300 word abstracts, together with a brief 1 page CV, should be submitted to Comintern2022@ljmu.ac.uk by the extended deadline of Friday 20 May 2022. Successful applicants will be informed soon thereafter.

Kontakt

Dr Thomas Beaumont, Liverpool John Moores University
Dr Tim Rees, University of Exeter
Comintern2022@ljmu.ac.uk

https://www.ljmu.ac.uk/conferences/rethinking-international-communism
Redaktion
Veröffentlicht am
13.05.2022
Klassifikation
Epoche(n)
Weitere Informationen
Land Veranstaltung
Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Sprache der Ankündigung