In preparing this book, we received generous assistance from Nienke Brienen-Moolenaar, Hylke Faber, and Boris van Gool at Brill Publishers. We also extend our gratitude to other colleagues who provided invaluable ideas, critical comments, and encouragement: Bert Altena, Kim Clark, Carl Levy, Thad Metz, James Pendlebury, Michael Schmidt, Nicole Ulrich, and Marcel van der Linden. The editors are grateful to Marcel van der Linden for making possible the publication of Arif Dirlik’s article. We wish to thank all the contributors to this volume for their patience and dedication to this project. Subsequent to the conference, we solicited papers from Geoffroy de Laforcade, Edilene Toledo and Luigi Biondi, Aleksandr Shubin, Anthony Gorman, and Emmet O’Connor. This book began as a panel on “Anarchism and Anarcho-syndicalism in the Global South: Latin America in Comparative Perspective” for the European Social Science History Conference held in Amsterdam in 2006. Recuperation: the richness of classical anarchism and syndicalism The vicissitudes of anarchist and syndicalist ![]() The anarchist press, and the debate over syndicalismĪnarchist and syndicalist activities in São PauloĪnarchist and syndicalist involvement in the great São Paulo strikes The emergence of Brazilian anarchism and syndicalism ![]() The transnational making of the syndicalist movement in São Solidarity and Federalism: an antidote to atavistic nationalismĬonstructing Syndicalism and Anarchism Globally: The defeat and resurgence of anarchist and syndicalist unions Labour insurgency confronts nationalism after the European War Straddling the Nation and the Working World:Īnarchism and syndicalism on the docks and rivers of Argentina,Īrgentina: locating protest on the littoralĪnarchism’s port of entry in the AmericasĪnarchists and Catholics: cosmopolitanism vs. The Panama Canal Zone: the western link in the Caribbean networkĪnarchism in Mexico and the Southwestern US:Ĭonclusion: transnational anarchist networks in tropical North America Puerto Rico: The eastern link in the Caribbean network South Florida: the northern link in the Caribbean network The Caribbean, Southern United States, and Mexico,Ĭuba: the hub of the Caribbean anarchist network The Peruvian variant of revolutionary syndicalismĪnarcho-syndicalism in Peru’s southern highlands The Origins of Anarcho-Syndicalism in Lima-Callao Part Two: Anarchism and Syndicalism in theĪdapting transnational influences and forging counterhegemonic practices, Syndicalism, Industrial Unionism, and Nationalism in Partisan war in the rear of the Reds and Whites The alliance with the Bolsheviks, and the issue of anti-Semitism The national liberation struggle, anarchism and the The formation of the nationalist Ukrainian stateīrest-Litovsk, German occupation and anarchist resistance The beginnings and rise of the anarchist movement The Makhnovist Movement and the National Question in the Korea anarchists in educational and popular militia projectsĬhinese anarchists and the question of culture Korean Acceptance of Anarchism: national consciousness and transnational concerns ![]() The ISL and the reform of the existing unions Red, black and white: the ISL and One Big Union amongst people of colour The IWW, the SLP and the national question on the Witwatersrand The Communist school analysis of the early leftĮmergent anarchism and syndicalism in South Africa, 1886–1913Īcross the colour line: the SDF achievement ![]() Labourite and Communist approaches to the national question National Question in South African Socialism,īackground: the national question, labour and the left Revolutionary Syndicalism, Communism and the The Anarchist Movement in Egypt 1860–1940 but united in aspirations of civil progress”: “Diverse in race, religion and nationality. Part One: Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial World Three major anarchist and syndicalist approaches to independence strugglesĪ Note on the Volume’s Organisation and Scope Internationalism, anti-colonialism, and national liberation The class character of anarchism and syndicalismĪnarchism, syndicalism, and transnational networks Taking a global view of anarchist and syndicalist history Taking anarchism and syndicalism seriously The Colonial and Postcolonial Experience, 1870–1940
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