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The Left Book Club and its associates: transnational circulation of socialist ideas in the Atlantic network (1935-1947)

Grant number: 19/04659-3
Support Opportunities:Scholarships abroad - Research Internship - Post-doctor
Start date: September 01, 2019
End date: January 31, 2020
Field of knowledge:Humanities - History - Modern and Contemporary History
Principal Investigator:Tania Regina de Luca
Grantee:Matheus Cardoso da Silva
Supervisor: Leslie James
Host Institution: Faculdade de Ciências e Letras (FCL-ASSIS). Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP). Campus de Assis. Assis , SP, Brazil
Institution abroad: Queen Mary University of London, England  
Associated to the scholarship:17/13528-4 - The Left Book Club and its associates: transnational circulation of socialist ideas in an Atlantic network (1935-1947), BP.PD

Abstract

This project intends to consider the relations of the Left Book Club (LBC), the first book club of the modern era in Great Britain, with the themes of imperialism and colonialism, in view of its transnational performance between 1935 and 1948, the period of its operation. The club has founded more than 1500 sections spread across several British cities and 15 others around the globe. We understand that the transnational performance of the LBC favored the creation of an international circulation of ideas in a double-handed way: from London to the colonies, but also from these to the metropolis, in a process that seeks to supplant the notion of copying and imitation in favor of the notion of appropriation, although one can argue that the flow was more intense in the first of the above directions. To address this problem, we will focus on LBC relations with three international sections: The New Era Fellowship (founded in South Africa in 1937), the Current Affairs Group (founded in Southern Rhodesia in 1938) and the Left Book Club in Jamaica (founded in Jamaica in 1938). From the relations of these three sections with London, we intend to map a network of ideas circulation created between the Caribbean, Africa and Europe. In this circuit, we will highlight the circulation of non-European intellectuals in these transnational networks, who acted as carriers of anticolonial, anti-imperial, anti-racist and nationalist ideas. These issues were already discussed in regional networks, both in the extreme south of the African continent and in the Caribbean region, independently of the relations with Europeans. However, the transnational performance of the Club of London contributed to the circulation of what was produced within these local networks, which contributed to the expansion of the debates to other national contexts, especially in the Atlantic region, then under British influence. (AU)

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