About This Collection

 

Revolution and Protest Online is a research and learning database providing in one place comprehensive, comparative documentation, analysis, and interpretation of political processes through the lens of revolutions, protests, resistance and social movements. This easily searchable collection examines the most studied and important events and themes related to revolution and protest from the 18th century through the 21st century. This collection includes over 180 hours of video, 100,000 pages of printed materials (personal papers, organizational and government documents, journals, books, reports, videos, monographs, and speeches), and more than 1,000 images. Content is provided by preeminent historical archives as well as video partners. The collection also provides links to websites that offer background for the curated primary sources and documentaries.

Revolution and Protest Online is organized around more than thirty events and areas, representing a variety of time periods, regions, and topics.  They include:

 

American Revolution of 1776

Arab Spring

Chinese Communist Revolution, 1925-1949

The Civil Rights Movement

Cuban Revolutions of 1848 and 1953

Fédon’s Rebellion of 1795

Hungarian Revolution of 1956

India Civil Disobedience & Independence

Iranian Revolutions of 1953 & 1979

Russian Revolutions of 1905 & 1917

…and much more. 

 

The themes in the collection include:

 

Documentation of Crimes

Gender Revolutions

Guerilla Movements

Independence Movements

Indigenous Movements

Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency

Labor Movements

Non-violent Movements and Revolutions

Political Movements

Protest Art

Slave Rebellions

Student Movements

 

CONTENT HIGHLIGHTS

 

National Archives, Kew: 30 collections selected by curators, documenting major and lesser known revolutionary movements from the 18th to 21th century

University of London: Latin American pamphlets documenting revolutionary movements in the second half of the 20th century

Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University: eight cases, including student guides to the Cuban Revolution, Iranian Revolution, Nicaragua, Indonesia and the Arab Spring

WGBH Educational Foundation: Activist video testimonials with both conservative and liberal perspectives

Bridgeman Images and selections of books from Cambridge UP, Columbia UP, Cornell UP, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Indiana UP and more

The project is curated with assistance from an advisory board of respected scholars in the field.

 

Advisory Board

 

Baz Dreisinger

Professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

https://www.jjay.cuny.edu/faculty/baz-dreizinger

 

Vernon Burton

Professor of History; Director of the Clemson Cyberinstitute, Clemson University

 

Catherine Filloux

Playwright, Social Justice

 

Cathia Jenainati
English and Comparative Literary Studies, University of Warwick

 

Eugenia Palieraki

Latin American Studies, University of Cergy-Pontoise

 

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