People's History of Ideas Podcast
A podcast by Matthew Rothwell - Sâmbătă
126 Episoade
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The May 30 Movement: The Chinese People’s Uprising Against the British and Japanese in 1925
Publicat: 02.07.2020 -
Lenin’s Ideas on Revolutionary Situations and the Situation in the United States Today
Publicat: 25.06.2020 -
Back to the Labor Front!: The Japanese Mills Strike of 1925
Publicat: 18.06.2020 -
The Proletarian Nation vs. The Theory of the Productive Forces
Publicat: 11.06.2020 -
Friends Close, Enemies Closer: The United Front in Action
Publicat: 04.06.2020 -
The Road Is Tortuous: The Chinese Revolution and the End of the Global Sixties
Publicat: 28.05.2020 -
The Loneliest United Front: The Chinese Communist Party in 1923
Publicat: 21.05.2020 -
Communist Unionizing and the Genesis of the United Front with the Guomindang
Publicat: 14.05.2020 -
Workers' Revolution or Nationalist United Front? Early Strategic Decisions of the Chinese Communist Party
Publicat: 07.05.2020 -
Demarcation and Organization: The Chinese Communist Party is Founded
Publicat: 30.04.2020 -
From Russia with Organizational Expertise: The Comintern Comes to China
Publicat: 24.04.2020 -
The Communist International
Publicat: 25.03.2020 -
Mao's Anarchist Years (The Young Mao Zedong Part Two)
Publicat: 20.02.2020 -
Liberals Becoming Marxists: The New Culture and May 4th Movements (1915-1919)
Publicat: 29.01.2020 -
The Young Mao Zedong
Publicat: 21.12.2019 -
The 1911 Revolution
Publicat: 14.12.2019 -
Revolutionary Voices from the End of the Qing Dynasty
Publicat: 21.11.2019 -
The Boxer Uprising of 1900
Publicat: 05.11.2019 -
Kang Youwei and the Hundred Days Reform
Publicat: 12.10.2019 -
Losing the Tributaries: The Sino-French and Sino-Japanese Wars in Vietnam and Korea
Publicat: 29.09.2019
In this podcast, Matthew Rothwell, author of Transpacific Revolutionaries: The Chinese Revolution in Latin America, explores the global history of ideas related to rebellion and revolution. The main focus of this podcast for the near future will be on the history of the Chinese Revolution, going all the way back to its roots in the initial Chinese reactions to British imperialism during the Opium War of 1839-1842, and then following the development of the revolution and many of the ideas that were products of the revolution through to their transnational diffusion in the late 20th century.