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‘Capturing Anarchists Across Borders’: the transnational dimensions of Italian antimilitarist campaigns, 1911-1914

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 11:49 authored by Pietro DipaolaPietro Dipaola

This article stems from the vibrant debate on methodological developments and new perspectives that has been inspired by a recent upsurge of interest in the transnational history of labour and radical movements. It engages with the problematic question of the integration between different scales of analysis in the study of radicalism: the ‘transnational’, ‘national’ and ‘local’ or ‘trans-local’. The article reverts the study of transnational anarchism back to a ‘national’ and ‘trans-local’ perspective: the analysis of the intersection between the networks of those who migrated from Italy and those who stayed there provides a fruitful way to uncover the dynamics within the transnational anarchist movement and the inter-playing, in both directions, between: home country - exiles’ communities - host countries. The article focuses on the crucial - but still unexplored - contributions in terms of propaganda, theoretical debate, financing, and counterculture production that the communities of Italian anarchists abroad (among them London, Paris, Berne, Marseille, Barre, and Buenos Aires) gave to the antimilitarist campaigns against the Italian colonial enterprise in Libya and for the release of Augusto Masetti - the soldier who shot at his colonel whilst addressing troops leaving for the frontline - from 1911 to 1914. The investigation of the initiatives that the anarchist exiles established and coordinated with their comrades in Italy provides a significant case study not only for the understanding of network-based transnational anarchism but also to reflect on the mechanisms of political migration and its influence in the development of social conflicts.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Immigrants & Minorities

Volume

35

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

177-195

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

0261-9288

eISSN

1744-0521

Date Submitted

2017-05-15

Date Accepted

2017-03-10

Date of First Publication

2017-11-07

Date of Final Publication

2017-11-07

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-05-12

ePrints ID

27497