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"A Wide Net of Solidarity traces the influence of the Latin American solidarity organization LADLA (Liga Antimperialista de las Americas) on anti-imperialist and anti-extractive struggles from the early twentieth century to the present. Founded in 1925 in Mexico City, LADLA brought together trade unions, agrarian organizations, and artistic groups to fight US imperialism and critique the destruction of communally owned land through the implementation of mono-crop agriculture. Though neglected in recent decades, LADLA was a forerunner of supporting Black and Indigenous-led resistance movements…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"A Wide Net of Solidarity traces the influence of the Latin American solidarity organization LADLA (Liga Antimperialista de las Americas) on anti-imperialist and anti-extractive struggles from the early twentieth century to the present. Founded in 1925 in Mexico City, LADLA brought together trade unions, agrarian organizations, and artistic groups to fight US imperialism and critique the destruction of communally owned land through the implementation of mono-crop agriculture. Though neglected in recent decades, LADLA was a forerunner of supporting Black and Indigenous-led resistance movements while envisioning this support as part of a hemispheric globalism in which anti-racist struggles in the Americas could connect to global struggles for racial and economic justice. Anne Garland Mahler delves deep into LADLA's archive to theorize the ways that political struggle was intertwined with aesthetic practice as a tool to work through questions of racialization, solidarity, and internationalism"--
Autorenporträt
Anne Garland Mahler is Associate Professor at the University of Virginia, author of From the Tricontinental to the Global South: Race, Radicalism, and Transnational Solidarity, also published by Duke University Press, and coeditor of The Comintern and the Global South: Global Designs/Local Encounters.