Bandung Humanism: Towards a New Understanding of the Global South
Introduction
Hong Liu and Taomo Zhou
A world to win: China, the Afro-Asian Writers’ Bureau, and the reinvention of World Literature
Pieter Vanhove
Reporting the Global South: the Afro-Asian Journalist Association, 1963-1974
Taomo Zhou
Reworking Bandung internationalism: decolonization and postcolonial futurism in Burma/Myanmar
Geoffrey Aung
Articles
Ironic political reforms: elected Senators, party-list MPs, and family rule In Thailand
Yoshinori Nishizaki
Agrarian transition in the southern Philippines: more than poverty, dispossession, and violence
Magne Knudsen
Cold War brotherhood contested: KATUSAs, slicky boys, American G.I.s, and the Status of Forces Agreement in South Korea, 1954-1966
Hwang Taejin
Development for all? State schemes, security, and marginalization in Kashgar, Xinjiang
Alessandro Rippa and Rune Steenberg
Commentary
North Korean Juche: A form of national communism or tradition?
Sergei O. Kurbanov
The Call was the flagship journal of the Afro-Asian Writers’ Bureau, which was established in 1958 in the wake of the first Asia-Africa Conference held at Bandung, Indonesia, in 1955. This 1967 cover features young men from Congo-Brazzaville reading Mao Zedong’s Little Red Book. Source: The Call 2 (1967).