The Russian Revolution in Asia : from Baku to Batavia
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Russian Revolution in Asia : from Baku to Batavia
(Routledge studies in modern history)
Routledge, 2022
- : [hardback]
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Note
Other editors: Étienne Forestier-Peyrat, Yuexin Rachel Lin, Naoko Shimazu
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Russian Revolution in Asia: From Baku to Batavia presents a unique and timely global history intervention into the historiography of the Russian Revolution of 1917, marking the centenary of one of the most significant modern revolutions.
It explores the legacies of the Revolution across the Asian continent and maritime Southeast Asia, with a broad geographic sweep including Iran, the Caucasus, Central Asia, China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, and India. It analyses how revolutionary communism intersected with a variety of Asian contexts, from the anti-colonial movement and ethnic tensions, to indigenous cultural frameworks and power structures. In so doing, this volume privileges Asian actors and perspectives, examining how Asian communities reinterpreted the Revolution to serve unexpected ends, including national liberation, regional autonomy, conflict with Russian imperial hegemony, Islamic practice and cultural nostalgia. Methodologically, this volume breaks new ground by incorporating research from a wide range of sources across multiple languages, many analysed for the first time in English-language scholarship.
This book will be of use to historians of the Russian Revolution, especially those interested in understanding transnational and transregional perspectives of its impact in Central Asia and Southeast Asia, as well as historians of Asia more broadly. It will also appeal to those interested in the history of Islam.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1. Transnational Communism and Asia: A Precocious Encounter Section One: The Revolution in Russia's Borderlands 2. From Autonomy to an Asian Revolution: Koreans and Buryat-Mongols in the Russian Imperial Revolution and the Soviet New Imperialism, 1917-1926 3. A Colonial Revolution: The Revolutions of 1917 in Semirech'e 4. Freedom on the Fence: The Caucasian Borderlands and the Boundaries of Revolution Section Two: The Wider Arc of Revolution in Asia 5. The Bolshevik Infection: European Perspectives on Communism in the Netherlands East Indies Press 6. The Comintern, the Communist Party of the United States, and Chinese Networks in the Prewar Philippine Communist Movement (1920-1942) 7. (Un)preparing a Revolution: The Comintern in the Prelude to the 1926-1927 Uprisings in Indonesia 8. Revolutions as Transnational Events: The Russian Revolution and Vietnam 9. The Russian Revolution in the Indian Nationalist Imaginary 10. From Political to Cultural Symbol: Moscow Restaurant and the Evolution of Sino-Soviet Relations Section Three: Islam and the Revolution 11. Revolutionary Situation in Turkestan (February 1917-February 1918): The Local Dynamics of the Russian Revolutions 12. Between Backwardness and Revolution: The Equivocal Genesis of "Crimes of Ways of Life" in the First Soviet Penal Code, 1919-1924 13. The Russian Revolutions and the Emergence of the Indonesian Communist Movement: Understanding the Relationship between Islam and Communism
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