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Call for Papers

Theme: Transnational Leftism
Subtitle: The Comintern and the National, Colonial and Racial
Questions
Type: International Workshop
Institution: L.R. Wilson Institute for Canadian History, McMaster
University
Location: Hamilton, ON (Canada)
Date: 21.–22.9.2017
Deadline: 31.3.2017

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There are three prevailing wisdoms about Communists and the Comintern
and the National and Racial Questions. The first is that the
Comintern was a monolithic organization, in which members were loyal
to Moscow first and had no time for legitimate nationalist or
anti-racist rhetoric outside of that dictated from on high. The
second is that if national self-determination or racial equality was
taken seriously, the Comintern or certain Communists exploited these
positions opportunistically, seeking to aid Soviet foreign policy.
The third is that anti-imperialism and racial equality, legitimate or
not, were limited in their effectiveness as a result of the
Comintern’s general focus towards Europe and European issues. But as
transnational studies of the Comintern, racial equality and the
national question have started to show, these prevailing views are
not as convincing as they once were. Communist Parties, while
certainly answering to Moscow, were able to develop their own
positions and engage with ideas of nationalism, anti-imperialism and
racial equality on their own terms, to varying degrees, and often
interacted with other parties, movements and ideas when doing so.

Organized by Oleksa Drachewych, Ian McKay and Maxime Dagenais,
'Transnational Leftism: The Comintern and the National, Colonial and
Racial Questions' seeks to draw together scholars from Canada and
around the world to reflect upon the potential of the transnational
turn for re-imagining the history of Communists, the Comintern and
questions of race, nation and imperialism. It will also seek to unite
the often disconnected histories of individual Communist Parties
throughout the world with those of Canada. We invite papers on all
aspects of the Comintern on issues of race and nationhood. How
coherent, consistent, comprehensible and plainly communicated was the
‘Comintern Line’ on these questions? Were race and nation, within the
Communist movement and beyond it, conceptualized as being the same or
distinct questions? Once in place, could the line with respect to
them be modified, either explicitly or implicitly, by activists?
Could the Comintern position be subjected to local amendment – and
even wholesale revision? Furthermore, we encourage papers that speak
on the legacies and ideology of the Comintern and its significance in
shaping the anti-colonial and post-colonialist movements of
resistance. Exploring the transnational entanglements of World
Communism, nationalism and anti-racism, in the years in which the
Comintern rose and fell as an influential global actor, this workshop
ultimately aims to ask new questions and incite fresh debates about
the contested legacy of the Comintern in the twentieth century.

This workshop will be held September 21-22, 2017 at the L.R. Wilson
Institute for Canadian History at McMaster University in Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada. The Wilson Institute will provide assistance towards
lodging and travel re-imbursement for accepted speakers. Proposals
should include a brief one-page C.V. and a 250-word abstract of the
proposed paper, and are due by 31 March 2017.

A select number of papers will also be chosen for publication in an
edited collection to be part of the Canada in the World Series with
McGill-Queen’s University Press. Submissions and all inquiries should
be directed to: wilso...@mcmaster.ca


Contact:

Wilson Institute for Canadian History
Department of History
L.R. Wilson Hall Room 2802
McMaster University
1280 Main Street West
Hamilton, ON, L8S 4L9
Canada
Email: wilso...@mcmaster.ca
Web: http://wilson.humanities.mcmaster.ca




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