Asia – Revolutionary Papers https://revolutionarypapers.org Just another WordPress site Sun, 31 Aug 2025 17:53:43 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Tulu https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/tulu/ Mon, 10 Mar 2025 12:00:19 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3287 Tulu was a Soviet state-sponsored publication in Pakistan that was in print from 1967-1991, and stopped production after the fall of the Soviet Union.

]]>
Lail-o-Nihar | لیل و نہار https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/lail-o-nihar-%d9%84%db%8c%d9%84-%d9%88-%d9%86%db%81%d8%a7%d8%b1/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 09:38:03 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3265 Lail-o-Nihar | لیل و نہار, started in 1957 as a newspaper distributed weekly in Pakistan by Progressive Papers Limited publishing house … read more

]]>
Savera https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/savera/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 09:18:27 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3263 Savera, a left-wing literary magazine published quarterly in Lahore, Pakistan from 1946 … read more

]]>
Palestinian bayan https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/palestinian-bayan/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 08:50:48 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3266 Communiques were central to the coordination of the mass popular uprising that challenged Israeli rule over Palestinians from 1987 until the early 1990s. These short political texts were called manasheer or bayanat al-Intifada, in Arabic. The Teaching Tool, Manasheer of the First Palestinian Intifada, profiles one such bayan, the first of the serialized bayanat distributed by the Unified Leadership of the Intifada (UNLI) on 8 January 1988. Authored by the local, underground, and anonymous leadership and illicitly distributed by radio or in print and laid on doorsteps and bus stops, or strewn in grocery aisles and plastered to walls, the bayanat became a central feature of life during the Intifada. The bayanat enabled the collective organizing of the popular anticolonial revolt by communicating with the public while the UNLI cadres distributing the bayanat evaded Israeli surveillance and arrest. … read more

]]>
Al-Fatah https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/al-fatah/ Fri, 25 Oct 2024 09:03:55 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3264 The journal Al-Fatah (“The Victory” in Arabic) published in Karachi, Pakistan from May 1970 till approximately July 1990. The periodical was produced in Urdu in the two decades it was distributed and became a major supporter of Pakistan People’s Party (PPP). The journal Al-fatah was largely socialist in terms of political inclination and critical of oppressive tendencies of the rental property economy. The political and social climate of Pakistan during the time of Al-fatah was extremely complex, making publishing as a left, critical periodical difficult to activate with continuing pressures of censorship from the state… read more

]]>
The Workers’ Autonomous Federation https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/the-workers-autonomous-federation/ Sun, 20 Oct 2024 15:48:26 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3245 In 1989 in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) the prints distributed amongst the local population symbolises a significant occurrence of mass organising in the region’s history. Produced in the form of handbills, waybills, posters and public communiques, prints handed out in factories, universities and on the walls of the streets. While the varying bodies of protestors had different grievances, they collaborated to equip the movement with printing structures, disseminate information and bolster solidarity.

The publications, each form with their own material histories in China, highlights the unofficial formation of the Workers’ Autonomous Federation (WAF) in the wake of Tiananmen protests in the Spring of 1989. The protests, named after the massacre on Tiananmen Square on June 4th where many workers, students, protestors, civilians and soldiers lives were lost. WAF expressed solidarity with the struggle of the students and held a unified ground for the mobilisation of a labour movement, which included the different sects of labour and their specific outcries. The Chinese workers’ role during Tiananmen lies thus not only in their organizing contributions in the streets of Beijing in May but in their vigorous use of counter-institutional publications to carve out alternate discursive spaces to develop socialist ideas external to the state and yet make demands on it.

In other words, the circumstances and form of workers’ writing was inseparable to how the workers independently practiced new ideas of struggle in Tiananmen. These writings demand “completely independent” forms of autonomous governance that would “supervise” the Communist Party and develop a system of socialist pluralism to take control of and reorganize the Chinese society’s means of production. These perspectives informed the means and tactics of workers’ struggle, from how the workers negotiated their relationship to the students to why they decided to take over certain factory production lines as a means to assist the struggle. The diverse forms of writing were tactical and timed to respond to different moments of the struggle in May from day to day, varying from adjusting their demands with different manifesto flyers to verse poetry and more personalized open letters to specific student bodies.

]]>
Dinbandhu and Dinmitra https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/dinbandhu-and-dinmitra/ Sun, 20 Oct 2024 15:25:54 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3251 Lower caste assertion in Modern India has been a topic of critical interest for several researchers in the recent past. The Satyashodhak movement spearheaded by Jotirao Phule in 1873 is one such important movement. However, the movement has largely been studied in a teleological manner, from its birth as a social movement to its culmination into a political party. The overwhelming focus on ‘reformism’, I seek to argue, limits our understanding in gauging the more fundamentally radical aspects of the movement. I argue that this radical rupture was the incoming of the print technology. Dīnbandhu (brother of the oppressed) was started by Krishnarao Bhalekar in 1877. This was the first non-brahmin newspaper not just from Western India but from all of India. This was later followed by a newspaper called Dīnmitra, started by Bhalekar’s son Mukundrao Patil. Dīnmitra began in 1910 and continued as a fortnightly newspaper till 1967. It is interesting to note that Dīnmitra was started from a small village called Tarawadi in Ahmednagar district in Western India, which makes it colonial India’s first rural newspaper. Both these newspapers in the Marathi language are unique historical examples wherein one family initiated and nurtured a discourse on caste oppression for close to 100 years… read more

]]>
Lotus https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/lotus/ Wed, 21 Aug 2024 10:00:42 +0000 https://revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=3213 Lotus was the trilingual (Arabic, English, and French) journal published by the Afro-Asian Writers Association from 1968 to 1991. Initially headquartered in Cairo, but with the French and English editions printed out of East Germany, the journal relocated to Beirut in 1973 following Anwar Sadat’s peace treaty with Israel and the consequent Arab boycott of Egypt, and again to Tunis in 1982 following the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Lotus was discontinued in the early 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union, which had provided the bulk of funding for the journal’s operations. There have been recent attempts to revive Lotus in the 2010s, but with mixed success. The editors-in-chief of Lotus was Yusuf Sebai in the Cairo years, Faiz Ahmed Faiz in the Beirut years, and Ziyad Abdel Fattah in the Tunis years. The print run was around 5,000 copies, and, with the exception of some bookstores, the readership was mostly by subscription. Issues of the magazine ranged between 80 and 150 pages, and were richly illustrated throughout. The content included a variety of genres, from academic essays to poems, from transcriptions of important speeches to political manifestos, from short stories to conference motions and resolutions, from readers’ letters to reports on important world events… read more

]]>
Sawt Al-Thawra https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/sawt-al-thawra/ Mon, 07 Feb 2022 07:53:13 +0000 https://tools.revolutionarypapers.org/?post_type=journal&p=524 Sawt al-Thawra (Voice of the Revolution) was a weekly bulletin published by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman and the Arabian Gulf (PFLOAG), or Jabha al-Shaʻbīya li-Taḥrīr ʻUmān wa-al-Khalīj al-ʻArabī in Arabic, from 1972. The PFLOAG was a Marxist-Leninist organisation engaged in armed revolutionary struggle in Dhufar, Oman, against a counterinsurgency commanded by British officers with the assistance of Iranian, Jordanian and other forces. The 9th of June 1965 was declared as the first day of the Dhufar revolution which continued until the formal end of the war in 1976, although revolutionary activities, including in the cultural sphere, extended beyond this date. Sawt al-Thawra was a key periodical which articulated the PFLOAG’s revolutionary conception of the world, placing the Dhufar revolution within the global constellation of revolutionary Third World, leftist and anticolonial networks. Sawt al-Thawra was written, edited, and published in Aden, the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY), which was the main support base of the revolution. Its pages are filled with news items, articles, reports and interviews concerning not only the revolution, military operations, the counterinsurgency and its collaborators, but connections with and mentions of global revolutionary movements and progressive and socialist states across the world. This Teaching Tool considers the periodical as an important archival source and offers a detailed and contextualised exploration of how Sawt al-Thawra constructed an internationalist revolutionary worldview through analysis of key themes: connections with the transnational left in the Middle East including the Palestinian revolution and the Iranian left; references to various national liberation movements and figures from Cuba to Vietnam; attention to women’s liberation in the PFLOAG’s project of social transformation; and engagement with solidarity and support committees in the global New Left. Beyond its abundant expression of a politically situated and imagined revolutionary subjectivity, Sawt al-Thawra presents a window into the material transnational and transregional links between the Dhufar revolution and the tricontinental world in the long 1960s.

]]>
Vijnan Karmee: Journal of the Association of Scientific Workers of India https://revolutionarypapers.org/journal/vijnan-karmee-journal-of-the-association-of-scientific-workers-of-india/ Thu, 06 Jan 2022 12:49:41 +0000 http://revolutionarypapers.localhost/journal/vijnan-karmee-journal-of-the-association-of-scientific-workers-of-india/ Science and Solidarity: The Vigyan Karmee and the Quest for an ‘Afro- Asian Science’

The Association of Scientific Workers of India (ASWI) was formally founded in 1947, the same year when India gained Independence from colonial rule. The ASWI, as a trade union organization of scientists was part of global network of individual scientists and trade union organisation of scientists organized under the aegis of the World Federation of Scientific Workers (WFSW). The Vijnan Karmee as the mouthpiece of the ASWI published a variety of issues ranging from domestic science policy, disarmament, and history of science and working conditions of scientists. The monthly magazine slowly evolved as a platform for the articulation of a progressive vision of science, especially the role that science should play in a newly Independent country. In the 1950’s, the emergence of the Third World as a political imagination triggered an articulation for an ‘Asian Science’ in the pages of Vijnan Karmee.  As the solidarities among nations of the Third World crystallized into the Non Aligned Movement the Vijnan Karmee became the arena where Afro- Asian solidarity and collaboration for science found expression. In my paper I will argue that the Vijnan Karmee holds the unique reputation of being a periodical which was trying to articulate solidarity and collaboration for a progressive common Afro-Asian agenda for science. I will further argue that articles that appeared around this theme in the magazine didn’t just include an inventory of areas of research but also articulated the cognitive and historical need for such solidarities and collaboration.

]]>