“People Treated Me with Equality”: Indigenous Australians Visiting the Soviet Bloc during the Cold War

This paper discusses the entwining of Australian communists, trade unions and indigenous activists: a much-studied topic. However, I approach it from a “transnational” perspective, unearthing intersections between global ideas and local activism through a case study of how the Communist Party of Aus...

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Published in:Labour history (Canberra) no. 111; pp. 45 - 57
Main Author: Piccini, Jon
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Sydney Australian Society for the Study of Labour History 01-11-2016
Australian Society for Labour History, Institute Bldg
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Summary:This paper discusses the entwining of Australian communists, trade unions and indigenous activists: a much-studied topic. However, I approach it from a “transnational” perspective, unearthing intersections between global ideas and local activism through a case study of how the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) and trade union bodies under its control or influence sent particular indigenous activists abroad during the 1950s and 1960s. It looks at why the CPA would invest the time and money in these trips, and what indigenous Australians thought they could get out of them. In so doing, it explores the possibilities and limits of this form of globally-centred solidarity, and adds a new dimension to our understanding of international communist and trade union politics.
Bibliography:LabourHist_c.jpg
Labour History, No. 111, Nov 2016: 45-57
ISSN:0023-6942
1839-3039
DOI:10.5263/labourhistory.111.0045