Introduction
The Global Sixties
Scott Rutherford, Sean Mills, Susan Lord, Catherine Krull, and Karen Dubinsky
Revolution from de Beat
Lillian Allen
Section I: Nation-Decolonization-Liberation
Whose 1960s? Gender, Resistance and Liberation in Palestine
Rabab Abdulhadi
The Liberation Formation, 1965-1976: International Themes, Canadian Variations
Ian McKay
Moving into “The Master’s House”: The State-Nation and Black Power in the United States
Van Gosse
1968 and the Soviets
Kimmo Rentola
“The Malcolm X Doctrine”: The Republic of New Afrika and the Decolonization of America
Dan Berger
Interpretations of Third World Solidarity and Contemporary German Nationalism
Jennifer Ruth Hosek
The National Security War on Queers, the Left, and the “Sixties”
Gary Kinsman
The Clash between the Extreme Right and the New Left Wing in the Years of Mass Protests in Italy, France and the Federal German Republic (1967–1969)
Guido Panvini
Resisting the Sixties: the Dutch New Right in a Global Perspective
Tity de Vries
Transpacific Revolutionaries: The Creation of Latin American Maoism
Matthew Rothwell
On Digging It: Correspondences between Dineh Uranium Miners and the Health and Safety Program of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers' Union
Julie Boddy
“Liberation Support/Anti-Apartheid as Seeds of Global Consciousness: The Birth of Solidarity with Southern African Struggles in the 1960s”
John S. Saul
Section II: Cultural Citizenship of the Sixties
“Revolution in 16mm: Film and Transnationalism in the Making of Latin American Radicalism”
Michael Kirkpatrick
The Global Dimensions of Cuban Film Institute in the 1960s
Maria Caridad Cumana
The Japanese Sixties: Kon Ichikawa’s Tokyo Olympiad
Kyoko Sato
Black Diasporic Politics and Style in 1960s Tanzania: Toward a Transnational History
Andrew Ivaska
A Global Blackness: Art, Race and Internationalism in the 1966 Exhibition The First World Festival of Negro Arts
Tobias Wofford
Media, Politics and Society during the Italian Economic Boom (1958-1963)
Marilisa Merolla
Rural Working-Class Theatre in Sweden
Stefan Backius
A ‘Bubbling Volcano’: Edinburgh, the Festivals, and the Cultural Explosion of the Sixties
Angela Bartie
Constructing Pariah Spaces in the Americas North and South: Newspaper Representations of Slums, Ghettos and Favelas in the 1960s
Sean Purdy
“No Axe to Grind in Africa”: Violence, Racial Prejudice and Media Depictions of the Canadian Peacekeeping Mission to the Congo, 1960-1964
Colin McCullough
Trip to Hanoi: Anti-War Travel and Transnational Consciousness
Franny Nudelman
Political graphics of the “long 1960s”
Lincoln Cushing
Section III: Mobilizing Bodies
1968: Spring-board for Women’s Liberation
Sheila Rowbotham
Group consciousness in Brazil: appropriation (1964-1989)
Joana Maria Pedro
Reframing the ‘Whiteness’ of US Feminism: The 1960s Protest ‘Movement’, Radical Feminism, and the Abjection of Whiteness
Amanda Third
Breaking outlines in the time of transformation in Cuba
Sonia Enjamio Expósito
Shamans of the Spring: 1960s Environmentalism and the New Jeremiad
Michael Egan
“More Dangerous Than Bombs or Bullets: Agent Orange, Dioxin, and the Environmental Imaginary”
Edwin Martini
Transcending the Liberal Order: The political and cultural climate of ‘The Sixties” and sex reassignment surgery in Ontario
Kristin Ireland
At the Point of the Lance: Gender, Development, and the 1960s Peace Corp
Molly Geidel
Student Politics in Mexico in the Wake of the Cuban Revolution
Jaime Pensado
Quebec, English Canadian Student Activism in the Sixties: The Rise of Student Syndicalism
Barbara Godard
‘Women United Against the War’: Gender Politics, Feminism, and Vietnam Draft Resistance in Canada
Lara Campbell
Section IV: Legacies of the Sixties
The Context for Red Power Activism in the 1960's and its Enduring Importance
Lee Maracle
The New Left’s Unfulfilled Promise
Georgy Katsiaficas
An Embarrassment of Omissions, or Rewriting the Sixties – the Case of the Caribbean Conference Committee
David Austin
Mexico’s Rock Counterculture (La Onda) in Historical Perspective and Memory
Eric Zolov
Deepening the Anti-Nuclear Movement Since the Sixties
Jim Harding
Tear it Down: Reflection of a Veteran
Jaime Veve
Across the Universe: Rethinking Narratives of Second-Wave Feminism
Alice Echols
Engaging the Past, Mapping the Future
Cary Fraser
Correction: p 418, "and increased the number of defective children born" should be attributed to Linus Pauling, Nobel Lecture, Science and Peace, December 11, 1963
Epilogue
Tina Chen