Revolutionary Papers

Revolutionary Papers is a transnational research collaboration exploring 20th century periodicals of Leftanti-imperial and anti-colonial critical production. Read More

Teaching Tools

The Revolutionary Papers Teaching Tools highlight methods of research to bring out relevant insights about periodicals and the politics and pedagogies they were steeped in at the time and since then. They are designed for both educational and organising settings and can be used to focus on certain features of research into the periodical. Learn more.

If you would like to develop a teaching tool based on a revolutionary periodical, get in touch.

Close Reading Teaching tool

Mapping the Social Lives of The Namibian Review

Presented by

Koni Benson Nashilongweshipwe Mushaandja Asher Gamedze
27 November 2025

The Namibian Review: Origins The Namibian Review: A Journal of Contemporary South West African Affairs was published between 1976-1987. Initially it was produced by the Namibian Review Group (later known as the Swedish Namibian Association) and 14 editions were printed by Namibian political exiles in Sweden between 1976-1978. In 1979 the journal was translocated from […]

Series: Radical History Review Series: Revolutionary Papers Teaching Tools
free palestine cover collage
Linear Teaching tool

Free Palestine: British-based Solidarities with the Palestinian Revolution

Presented by

Sorcha Thomson Rami Rmeileh Akram Salhab
5 November 2025

Free Palestine was a monthly magazine published in Britain from 1968 until 1984, after which it moved to Australia from where it continued publication until 1992. The magazine, little known by activists or scholars today, is effectively an archive of the Palestine solidarity movement in Britain during the years of its publication, and contains a […]

Series: Revolutionary Papers Teaching Tools
Student Teaching Tool Table

Tulu

Presented by

Noor us Sahar Maryam Irfan Abdul Haleem
10 May 2023

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. Headquartered in the Soviet Union, it had Russian and Pakistani co-editors who wrote in Urdu, and later in English as well. The magazine was a part of the cultural war between […]

Series: The Revolutionary Papers Classroom