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.

The Revolutionary Papers Classroom

1 Teaching Tools

Teaching Global South Movements through Magazines

Revolutionary Papers Classroom is a teaching and research collaboration between Revolutionary Papers and the program in Comparative Literature and Culture Studies at LUMS University in Lahore, Pakistan.

Led by Sara Kazmi, the collaboration approached anticolonial and left periodicals as interventions into and resources for teaching and learning about revolutionary politics in the Global South. The Revolutionary Papers Classroom deepens RP’s commitment to developing pedagogy, methodology and research embedded in Global South contexts. The initiative aims to engage and train young Global South scholars in the comparative and transnational study of revolutionary print through syllabi, reading resources and new research. The Classroom convened a semester-long research seminar incorporating guest lectures from Koni Benson and Mahvish Ahmad, digital humanities training sessions, and visits to local archives at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, LUMS.

The following tools were co-authored by students who enrolled in the project’s taught course titled “Print Cultures of the Global South”. The tools showcase progressive and left-wing publications from Pakistan, including the iconic 1940s literary magazine Savera [Dawn] associated with the anticolonial Progressive Writers’ Movement, and the 1970s periodical Lail-o-Nihar [Night and Day] edited by iconic Pakistani communist and Lotus editor, Faiz Ahmad Faiz.

To bring Revolutionary Papers Classroom to your city or university, write to us at revolutionarypapers@gmail.com.

Student Teaching Tool Linear

Al-Fatah and the Struggle for Press Freedom

Presented by

Munema Zahid Niha Nazar Shiza Vaqas
10 May 2023

  Al-Fatah (“The Victory” in Arabic) was a weekly Urdu-language socialist periodical published out of Karachi, Pakistan, from May 1970 till approximately July 1990. It published a wide variety of content, although there was a distinct proclivity towards political topics. Al-Fatah‘s socialist leanings informed many stances that it took during its run. It was decidedly pro-China […]

Series: The Revolutionary Papers Classroom