revolution100

America's seminal red scare: The US and the perception of the Russian revolution

Cartoon gegen die "Rote Gefahr" 1919
Cartoon gegen die "Rote Gefahr" 1919 Foto: By Orr -- Chicago Tribune [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons Public Domain

The Russian Revolution is usually considered a watershed between the “long” 19th and the “short” 20th century. What Eric Hobsbawm referred to as the “Age of Extremes” was consequently initiated by the events in Russia that obviously had a tremendous impact on the United States as well; especially when it comes to the U.S. perception of revolutions and communism as two determining and “dangerous” factors in world history.

A conference at the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung’s New York Office from October 13-15, 2017 will try to shed light on the multiple perceptions of the Russian Revolution in the United States since 1917. We therefore ask scholars, whose research is focusing on one or more of the following topics, to send in a paper proposal for this event:

– The immediate perception of the Russian Revolution in the United States
– Communist revolutionaries and revolutionary communists: stigmatization and fear
– Red scares and the perception of the Russian Revolution in the United States since 1917
– The Russian Revolution and its legacy during the Cold War
– The Russian Revolution and the New Left in the United States
– Anti-communist actors/groups in the United States and the Russian Revolution

Paper proposals (max. 350 words) and a short CV are asked to be sent to Frank Jacob (fjacob@qcc.cuny.edu) by June 30, 2017. Presenters will be informed if their paper proposals have been selected in July. For questions with regard to the event, feel free to contact the organizers at any time.

Conference

13. October 2017
15. October 2017, All Day
, New York, United States
Veranstalter: 
Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung New York, Frank Jacob
Eine Veranstaltung der Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung