Patriotism or proletarian universalism. The place of the world in Colombian workerism and socialism, 1904-1930

What is the role of external agents and dynamics in the introduction of a political movement in a country like Colombia? Can an intense connection with the outside world be read as a sign of the successful modernization of political discourses and practices? This article inquires into the position o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Isidro Vanegas Useche
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia 2013-07-01
Series:Historia y Memoria
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.uptc.edu.co/index.php/historia_memoria/article/view/2199
Description
Summary:What is the role of external agents and dynamics in the introduction of a political movement in a country like Colombia? Can an intense connection with the outside world be read as a sign of the successful modernization of political discourses and practices? This article inquires into the position of workerist and socialist groups in the beginning of the XX century with respect to the outside world, that is, how they deined the Nation to which they aspired, and what place they gave to the universe as larger context. Findings show that in a irst stage, political activists of the working classes maintained scarce relations with Europe and United States, reafirming their search for greater equality as part of the vindication of the Nation. In a further stage, however, socialists rejected the Nation, building their hopes in the direction of a communist universalism, which put them into extended contact with what was  considered the matrix for a new humanity, at the cost of alienating the sympathy of the people they intended to represent.
ISSN:2027-5137
2322-777X