Monday, 30 September 2024

LSHG Autumn Seminar series

 Monday 7th October 5.30pm Rosalind Eyben, John Horner & the Communist Party, Uncomfortable Encounter with Truth. On Zoom. To book (required, free) https://www.history.ac.uk/events/john-horner-and-communist-party-uncomfortable-encounter-truth

Monday 21st October 5.30pm Fabrice Bensimon, The Chartist Meeting at Kennington Common, 10th April 1848. The daguerreotypes, the crowd and the coachman. In person, Room 301, Institute of Historical Research https://www.history.ac.uk/events/chartist-meeting-kennington-common-10-april-1848-daguerreotypes-crowd-and-coachman

Monday 4th November 5.30pm Gregor Gall, Mick Lynch. The Making & the Unmaking of a Working Class Hero? On Zoom To book (required, free) https://www.history.ac.uk/events/mick-lynch-making-and-unmaking-a-working-class-hero

Monday 18th November 5.30pm, Bob Henderson, Lenin in London. In person. Room 301 Institute of Historical Research

Monday 2nd December 5.30pm, Aidan Beatty. Gerry Healy & the WRP. Violence, Gender & the Perils of Trotskyism. On Zoom

All seminars are free to attend. Registration required, details to follow. Organised by the Socialist HIstory Seminar at the Institute of Historical Research & the London Socialist Historians Group

Thursday, 12 September 2024

A Useable Past - Stephen Yeo

A Useable Past: The History of Association, Cooperation and un-Statist Socialism in 19th and early 20th century Britain.

A three volume set 

Volume 1. Victorian Agitator, George Jacob Holyoake (1817-1906): Co-operation as 'This New Order of Life. 

Volume 2. A New Life, The Religion of Socialism in Britain, 1883-1896: Alternatives to State Socialism.

Volume 3. Class Conflict and Co-operation in 19th and 20th Century Britain. Education for Association: re-membering for a new moral world. 

 About the author

 Professor Yeo was Principal of Ruskin College, Oxford, 1989-97 and since then has been Chair of the Co-operative College and the Co-operative Heritage Trust in Manchester and Rochdale, engaging with and writing about the movement. Stephen began his adult life as a Labour Party Parliamentary candidate in the elections of 1964 and 1966. As a social historian, he is known for his work on association, cooperation, labour movements and religious and voluntary organisations. He taught at the University of Sussex for 25 years, and he was also active in Brighton’s community politics.