bolcheviquismo isleño: rusia y la tercera internacional en los imaginarios revolucionarios puertorriqueños, 1919-1936

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ID: 156929
2017
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Abstract
This article explores the meaning of the Bolshevik Revolution and the founding of the Communist International (Comintern) as revolutionary icons for the “workerist” environment in Puerto Rico between 1919 and 1936. The analysis focuses on the constructions, discursive mechanisms and allegorical references to these topics through a selection of items from the local internationalist-oriented workers press, covering three stages (1919-1921, 1927, 1934-1936) in the development of local communist radicalism. It presents examples on the construction of the concepts of bolshevism and international communism beyond the ideological and political context, suggesting an evolution from an anarchistic type of workers culture to one increasingly based on class struggle. The sources, taken from both the radical workers press and official Communist Party publications, provide a preliminary picture of revolutionary attitudes and dreams that would serve as the cultural and genealogical basis for local communism at a crucial stage in the island’s process of ideological and political formation.
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pujals2017historiabolcheviquismo Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors ;Sandra Pujals
Journal bulletin of the london mathematical society
Year 2017
DOI
10.7440/histcrit64.2017.04
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