‘History should become common property’ Raphael Samuel, History Workshop, and the Practice of Socialist History, 1966-1980

Socialist History - ISSN 0969-4331
Volume 2017 Number 51

‘History should become common property’ Raphael Samuel, History Workshop, and the Practice of Socialist History, 1966-1980
Ian Gwinn pages -

Abstract

The History Workshop movement, a grassroots coalition of radical-academic, feminist, and labour historians founded at Ruskin College in the late 1960s under the guidance of Raphael Samuel, represents a powerful example of the fusion of political commitment with historical practice. However, outside of a handful of general commentaries, the history of the Workshop remains mostly unexplored. This article focuses on two central pillars of the Workshop’s programme, the annual workshop gatherings held at Ruskin and the History Workshop Journal, in order to examine how its socialist (and feminist) political aspirations were translated into democratic and radical historical forms. It argues that this connection between politics and history should not be simply understood in theoretical or ideological terms, but should also encompass the symbolic, aesthetic and emotional dimensions of historical practice. While critical attention is paid to the tensions and limits of the Workshop’s project, the article suggests that it was precisely in the effort to negotiate the contradictions inherent in its own ideals that the relevance and productive use of the case of History Workshop endures.

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To cite this article
Ian Gwinn (2017) ‘History should become common property’ Raphael Samuel, History Workshop, and the Practice of Socialist History, 1966-1980, Socialist History, 2017(51), -

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