LEADER 06528nam 22007095 450 001 9910522951903321 005 20251202144708.0 010 $z9783030810498 010 $z3030810496 010 $a9783030810504$b(electronic bk.) 010 $a303081050X$b(electronic bk.) 024 7 $a10.1007/978-3-030-81050-4 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC6858321 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL6858321 035 $a(CKB)20822741100041 035 $a(DE-He213)978-3-030-81050-4 035 $a(EXLCZ)9920822741100041 100 $a20220115d2022 u| 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcz#---auuuu 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aProtest in the Vietnam War Era /$fedited by Alexander Sedlmaier 205 $a1st ed. 2022. 210 1$aCham :$cSpringer International Publishing :$cImprint: Palgrave Macmillan,$d2022. 215 $a1 online resource (455 pages) 225 1 $aPalgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements,$x2634-6567 311 08$aPrint version: Sedlmaier, Alexander Protest in the Vietnam War Era Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2022 9783030810498 320 $aIncludes index. 327 $aChapter 1: Protest in the Era of the Indochina Wars: Upending Centre and Periphery By Alexander Sedlmaier -- Part 1: Bridging the Worlds: International Organisations -- Chapter 2: ?To go further than words alone?: The World Peace Council and the Global Orchestration of Vietnam War Campaigns During the 1960s By Kim Christiaens -- Chapter 3: The Vietnam Activities of the Women?s International Democratic Federation (WIDF) By Francisca de Haan -- Part 2: State Socialism: Second-World solidarity, Propaganda, and Humanitarianism from Above and from Below -- Chapter 4: The Soviet Public and the Vietnam War: Political Mobilization, Public Organizations, and Activism, 1965?1973 By Julie Hessler -- Chapter 5: Between Anti-Imperialism and Anti-Communism: Poland and International Solidarity with Vietnam By Idesbald Goddeeris -- Chapter 6: The Engineering of Political Equidistance and Its Consequences: The Vietnam War and Popular Protest in Yugoslavia By Sabine Rutar & Radina Vu?eti? -- Part 3: The Capitalist Core: First World Activists Reach Out to Emancipatory and Revolutionary Movements Across the Globe -- Chapter 7: Vietnam War Protest and Solidarity in West Germany By Freia Anders & Alexander Sedlmaier -- Chapter 8: France?s Two Vietnams: Intellectual Protest Politics in Perspective By Silja Behre -- Chapter 9: The Japanese New Left, the Vietnam War, and Anti-Imperial Protest By Alex Finn Macartney -- Part 4: The Global South: Emancipation, anti-colonialism, Third Worldism -- Chapter 10: The Vietnam War, Maoism, and the Cultural Revolution: Propaganda and Mobilization in the People?s Republic of China By Kazushi Minami -- Chapter 11: The Vietnam War, Protest, and Democratization in South Korea By Tae Yang Kwak -- Chapter 12: The Vietnam War in Africa By Dan Hodgkinson & Luke Melchiorre -- Chapter 13: Revolutionary Soulmates? Cuba?s Slow Discovery of Vietnam By Antoni Kapcia -- Chapter 14: Singing in Solidarity: The Latin American Protest-Song Movement and the Vietnam War By MatíasHermosilla. 330 $a"With admirable global range, this refreshingly insightful volume explores the importance of international protests against the Vietnam War for the radicalising of national politics. By emphasizing the transnational circulation of ideas and people so vital to that history, it challenges older notions of centre and periphery, while decentring the United States from the story." --Geoff Eley, University of Michigan, USA. This book assesses the global emergence and transformation of protest movements during the Vietnam War era. It explores the relationship between activism explicitly focused on the war and other emancipatory and revolutionary struggles, moving beyond existing scholarship to examine the myriad interlinked protest issues and mobilisations around the globe during the Second Indochina War. Bringing together scholars working from a range of geographical, historiographical, and methodological perspectives, the volume offers a new framework for understanding the history of Vietnam War protest. A central inspiration is to shift our focus away from established perspectives that are thoroughly focused on the role of the United States with only peripheral attention paid to other parts of the world. The chapters are organised around the confluence of movements from the three geopolitical regions of the world: the core capitalist countries of the so-called first world, the socialist bloc, and the Global South, chiefly during the 1960s and early 1970s, but harking back to antecedents where appropriate. The opening section of the book lays the groundwork by focusing on international organisations that explicitly sought to bridge and unite solidarity and protest around the world. In a world of persistent military conflict, this book provides timely contributions to the larger questions of what war does to protest movements and what protest movements do to war. Alexander Sedlmaier is Reader in Modern History at Bangor University, Wales,UK, and International Fellow at the Institute for Social Movements at Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany. He works on contemporary German, European, and North American history and is author of Consumption and Violence: Radical Protest in Cold-War West Germany (2014). 410 0$aPalgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements,$x2634-6567 606 $aSocial history 606 $aWorld history 606 $aUnited States$xHistory 606 $aHistory, Modern 606 $aWorld politics 606 $aSocial History 606 $aWorld History, Global and Transnational History 606 $aUS History 606 $aModern History 606 $aPolitical History 615 0$aSocial history. 615 0$aWorld history. 615 0$aUnited States$xHistory. 615 0$aHistory, Modern. 615 0$aWorld politics. 615 14$aSocial History. 615 24$aWorld History, Global and Transnational History. 615 24$aUS History. 615 24$aModern History. 615 24$aPolitical History. 676 $a959.70431 676 $a959.70431 702 $aSedlmaier$b Alexander 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 912 $a9910522951903321 996 $aProtest in the Vietnam War era$92789011 997 $aUNINA