Fr. 156.00

Armed Internationalists - Transnational Volunteering in the Twentieth Century

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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This unique transnational history explores the extraordinary lives of left-wing volunteers who fought in not just one, but multiple conflicts across the globe during the mid-twentieth century. Utilising previously unpublished archival material, Heiberg, Acciai and Bjerström follow these individual soldiers through military conflicts that were, in most cases, geographically centred on individual countries but nonetheless evinced a crucial transnational dimension. From the Spanish Civil war of 1936 to the Nicaraguan Revolution of 1979, the authors marshall these diverse case studies to create a conceptual framework through which to better understand the networks and recruitment patterns of transnational volunteering. They argue that the Spanish Civil War created a model for this transnational left-wing military volunteering and that this experience shaped the global left responses to a range of conflicts throughout the twentieth century.

List of contents










1. Combatants without borders; 2. The battalion of seamen; 3. The making of a global warrior; 4. Asian outcasts; 5. Revolutionaries in search of a revolution; 6. Araceli's sisters in arms; 7. Armed internationalism (1936-1979); Index.

About the author

Morten Heiberg is Professor of Spanish History at the University of Copenhagen.Enrico Acciai is Associate Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Rome Tor Vergata.Carl-Henrik Bjerström is a historian of modern Spain and Europe.

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