Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction: The Lives of Cold War Afro-Asianism
- Chapter 2 Here and There: A Story of Women’s Internationalism, 1948-1953
- Chapter 3 Résistantes Against the Colonial Order: Women’s Grassroots Diplomacy During the French War in Vietnam (1945-1954)
- Interlude: Asian-African Solidarity
- Chapter 4 Asian Socialism and the Forgotten Architects of Post-Colonial Freedom
- Chapter 5 Where was the Afro in Afro-Asian Solidarity? Africa’s ‘Bandung Moment’
- Chapter 6 Asia as a Third Way? J.C. Kumarappa and the Problem of Development in Asia
- Interlude: The Dead Will Live Eternally
- Chapter 7 Delhi versus Bandung: Local Anti-imperialists and the Afro- Asian Stage
- Chapter 8 Building Egypt’s Afro-Asian Hub: Infrastructures of Solidarity in 1950s Cairo
- Chapter 9 Soviet “Afro-Asians” in UNESCO: Reorienting World History and Humanism
- Chapter 10 A Forgotten Bandung : The Afro-Asian Students’ Conference and the Call for Decolonisation
- Interlude: Yesterday and Today
- Chapter 11 Dispatches from Havana : The Cold War, Afro-Asian Solidarities, and Culture Wars in Pakistan
- Chapter 12 Microphone Revolution : North Korean Cultural Diplomacy During the Liberation of Southern Africa
- Chapter 13 Eqbal Ahmad: An Affective Reading of Afro-Asianism
- Chapter 14 Passports to the Post-colonial World: Space and Mobility in Francisca Fanggidaej’s Afro-Asian Journeys
- Epilogue: Afro-Asianism Revisited
- About the Authors
- Index
Chapter 9 - Soviet “Afro-Asians” in UNESCO: Reorienting World History and Humanism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 November 2024
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction: The Lives of Cold War Afro-Asianism
- Chapter 2 Here and There: A Story of Women’s Internationalism, 1948-1953
- Chapter 3 Résistantes Against the Colonial Order: Women’s Grassroots Diplomacy During the French War in Vietnam (1945-1954)
- Interlude: Asian-African Solidarity
- Chapter 4 Asian Socialism and the Forgotten Architects of Post-Colonial Freedom
- Chapter 5 Where was the Afro in Afro-Asian Solidarity? Africa’s ‘Bandung Moment’
- Chapter 6 Asia as a Third Way? J.C. Kumarappa and the Problem of Development in Asia
- Interlude: The Dead Will Live Eternally
- Chapter 7 Delhi versus Bandung: Local Anti-imperialists and the Afro- Asian Stage
- Chapter 8 Building Egypt’s Afro-Asian Hub: Infrastructures of Solidarity in 1950s Cairo
- Chapter 9 Soviet “Afro-Asians” in UNESCO: Reorienting World History and Humanism
- Chapter 10 A Forgotten Bandung : The Afro-Asian Students’ Conference and the Call for Decolonisation
- Interlude: Yesterday and Today
- Chapter 11 Dispatches from Havana : The Cold War, Afro-Asian Solidarities, and Culture Wars in Pakistan
- Chapter 12 Microphone Revolution : North Korean Cultural Diplomacy During the Liberation of Southern Africa
- Chapter 13 Eqbal Ahmad: An Affective Reading of Afro-Asianism
- Chapter 14 Passports to the Post-colonial World: Space and Mobility in Francisca Fanggidaej’s Afro-Asian Journeys
- Epilogue: Afro-Asianism Revisited
- About the Authors
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter highlights the activities of Soviet Central Asian intellectuals within the Soviet Committee for Solidarity with African and Asian Countries (SKSSAA) at UNESCO. It argues that the SKSSAA activated the UNESCO East-West Project (1956-1966) with the specific aim to advance a historical agenda that posited the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity at its center. When looking at the UNESCO Peoples’ History of Asia project, this approach to history resonated with lived experiences of complex solidarities that often transcended the boundaries of states. While there were political reasons for the disintegration of the UNESCO History of Asia Project, such as the Sino-Indian border war, the UNESCO regimes of professionalization seriously undermined the imaginary landscapes that the Peoples’ History of Asia project sought to sustain.
Keywords: Afro-Asianism, UNESCO, historiography, Soviet intellectuals, Central Asia
Narratives of African and Asian unity figured prominently in the agendas of national liberation pursued by decolonizing countries in the first half of the twentieth century. As historians have pointed out, across Afro-Asia, anti-colonial elites formulated agendas of modern statehood that shared a remarkable dualism. Analyzing the agenda of the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Movement (AAPSM) in the early 1960s, historians observed a shift from a “universalistic” ideal of African and Asian cultural liberation and modernization towards a more “particularistic” agenda of anti-colonial struggle. This they generally regarded as the logical consequence of inter-state conflict, notably the Indo-Chinese border war of 1962. Shifting focus, this chapter traces the demise of a universalistic agenda of Afro- Asian Solidarity to the non-state realm of cultural and intellectual activism, and to contesting visions of world history and humanism in particular.
Specifically, this chapter traces the activities of Central Asian intellectuals on the Soviet Committee for Solidarity with African and Asian Countries (Sovietskii Komitet Solidarnost’ Strany Azii i Afriki – SKSSAA), showing how these committed “Afro-Asians” came to activate the UNESCO institutional infrastructure in support of a humanist agenda that stressed the cultural-historical agency and unity of African and Asian peoples. In 1956, the UNESCO General Conference adopted a Major Program for the Mutual Appreciation of Eastern and Western Values, at the initiative of India and Japan.
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- The Lives of Cold War Afro-Asianism , pp. 191 - 212Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022