Crafting Entanglements
Afro-Asian Pasts of the Global Cold War
CRAFTE explores Afro-Asian entanglements during the Cold War, focusing on actors, practices and their everyday sites of interaction. The Cold War’s ambit of influence extended far beyond the geographical bounds of Euro-America and the Soviet Union. Recent research has taken note of voices from Africa and Asia, yet little is known about their interconnections. Overlooking these has given us a one-sided picture of the Cold War in which the global South only appears as a theatre of bloc politics. CRAFTE proposes to fill this gap by critically engaging with the lived world(s) of Afro-Asian connections, to show how these were embedded in, but also, how they shaped the global Cold War.
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Critically following actors’ trajectories and practices, the project goes beyond the analyses of state programmatics, institutions and discourses, which have dominated Cold War research. At its centre-stage is the question: How were Afro-Asian actors embedded in, and in turn how did they shape, the global Cold War?
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In order to understand the nature of ‘interconnections’, CRAFTE deploys the framework of entanglements “horizontally”, i.e. without postulating any centre-periphery divides or spatial hierarchies. The project’s central aim is to explore the scope and extent of South-South connections and how they were ‘crafted’ through material, symbolic and everyday practices during the Cold War.
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Image: Cover Page, Asian-African Conference Bulletin, Issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Indonesia, 1955.
Actors
Four kinds of actors and their specific sites of engagement constitute this project:
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Students’ networks within the World Federation of Democratic Youth (WFDY), the International Union of Students (IUS) and the International Student Conference (ISC);​​​
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​Women’s networks emerging from the Afro-Asian Women’s Conferences (Colombo 1958 and Cairo 1961) (AAWC), the Women’s International Democratic Federation (WIDF) and the United Nations Decade for Women (1975-85);
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​Media entanglements enabled by foreign broadcasting radio stations and their global listening publics (Deutsche Welle (DW), Radio Berlin International (RBI), British Broadcasting Service (BBC), Radio Moscow and Voice of America (VOI)),
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​ Afro-Asian actors in the divided Cold War city (East and West Berlin), particularly focusing on non-elite groups such as traders, shopkeepers, journalists, migrants, political asylum seekers, students, friendship societies and Afro-Asian unions on both sides of the Wall.​
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Image: Map of East Berlin, tourist guide, Hello and Welcome to the Capital of the GDR, published by Berlin-Information, Berlin, 1984, Private Collections Malobika Chattopadhyay, Kolkata, photo: Anandita Bajpai, March 2017.
Objectives
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In setting out to write uncharted histories of Afro-Asian interconnections, CRAFTE’s objectives are as follows:
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Mapping an inclusive, entangled and polycentric history of the Global Cold War –Afro-Asian pasts are not seen here as alternative histories to, or a counter illustration of, existing Cold War histories. Instead, they reveal how actors from Africa and Asia were deeply enmeshed in these pasts as ‘active’ co-shapers, advantage seekers and “political engineers” of postcolonial futures.
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Envisaging non-elite, social histories of the Cold War– In doing so, it moves beyond existing international and diplomatic histories which dominate Cold War historiography. Historiography on South-South engagements during the Cold War, NAM being the best example, has also largely remained confined to state programmatics. At its best, we now have intellectual histories which dominate ‘South-South Solidarity’ research. CRAFTE will push this strand from intellectual towards social history in which a variety of social actors such as radio listening publics, women’s collectives, students activist networks, migrants/refugees in exile, traders etc. find a prominent place. ​​​​
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Expanding the remit of the Cold War archive by moving beyond state and national archives to include local and regional archives, private collections and oral testimonies– Particularly in the two continents, the last generation of actors who were at the forefront of these exchanges is now slowly dwindling. Their narratives are an important source base (as has duly been recognized in the case of their counterparts from the blocs). Incorporating voices from the global South not only makes CRAFTE significant in its aims but also timely in its execution. One of the envisioned objectives is to establish a database of oral testimonies and visual sources (photographs and grey literature such as reports, pamphlets, posters, conference proceedings, and descriptions of memorabilia) titled Crafting the Cold War: Afro-Asian Voices as an ongoing digital source-base.
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Substantially expanding the spatial ambit of Cold War– Actors’ life stories reveal that Cold War divides were often not as rigid as they are made out to be. The trajectories of people, technology and ideas moved, overlapped and intersected in spite of existing constraints and control mechanisms.
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Casting a new lens on the pre-history of South-South relations– Entanglements are not approached as a set of romanticized solidarity networks. A crucially missing element is how historical interconnections have not obliterated discourses of otherness. For instance, in spite of interstate cooperation, South Asians were expelled from Uganda in 1972. Similarly, the racial profiling of/discrimination against African students is widespread in several Asian countries today. With growing academic interest in contemporary South-South relations, uncovering the recent pre-histories of these existing discourses becomes pertinent, though it is largely missing. Economic ties and cooperation did not always produce cultural empathies, and prejudices were part of the processes that forged entanglements.​
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Image: Poster, tourist guide, Hello and Welcome to the Capital of the GDR, published by Berlin-Information, Berlin, 1984, Private Collections Malobika Chattopadhyay, Kolkata, photo: Anandita Bajpai, March 2017.
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