A âconference and festivalâ is being held to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the death of radical historian Raphael Samuel.
Samuel (1934-96) was the founder of the History Workshop movement, explained Barbara Taylor, professor of humanities at Queen Mary University of London, which âcame out of his work with trade union students at Ruskin Collegeâ in Oxford.
âHe was impatient with the way history was taught at Oxford, where the syllabus included little about working people, so he encouraged students to look into their own industries.â
This led to a series of popular annual workshops at Ruskin, and later elsewhere, which attracted at least as many âstudents, community historians, teachers, social workers, activists, those working in what are now heritage centresâ as it did professional academic historians.
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Further links were forged when the first national womenâs liberation conference was held at Ruskin in 1970. The highly influential History Workshop Journal was launched by Samuel in 1976.
Towards the end of his life, Samuel moved to the University of East London to set up and run the Centre for East London History, which was renamed the Raphael Samuel History Centre in 2008.
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It is now a partnership between UEL; Birkbeck, University of London; Queen Mary; and the Bishopsgate Library. To mark the 20 years since his death and the 40 since the birth of journal, said Professor Taylor, one of the centreâs three directors, they decided to hold their largest event ever âto commemorate Raphael Samuel and the type of history he stood for and did so much to promoteâ.
will take place, at Queen Mary and other venues, from 30 June to 1 July.
It will open with a discussion of âfeminism and radical utopianismâ, while plenaries will look at âHistory Workshop and its legaciesâ and âradical histories then and nowâ.
Broad themes include âdiversity, difference and beyondâ, âlocal and global historiesâ and âhistory, policy, and the idea of politicsâ. Individual papers will consider everything from âradical squattingâ to âcoalfield solidarityâ, pubs, council estates, domestic labour, Palestinian childrenâs literature and âanti-racist lesbian thoughtâ. There will also be walks, installations, debates generated by documentary films and performances of radical Yiddish songs.
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Although the speakers are likely to be âbroadly left of centreâ, Professor Taylor said that she âwouldnât want to guess what perspectives will be presented. I expect some lively debate â what Raphael would call âcomradely discussionââ, addressing what we can still learn from the History Workshop movement, some of its blind spots and how it can be adapted to the needs of todayâs academy and society.
The event, in Professor Taylorâs view, may also stimulate new political thinking, since this depends crucially on âchanges in what people imagine is possibleâ.
âWe do feel part of a movement. We are not just backward-looking academics. There has been a real resurgence of feminism, challenges to the neoliberal paradigm students have grown up with which it has been difficult to think past. Young people are very restive about what is happening in education. Dialogue between past and present opens up people to other possibilities.â
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