The End of Internationalism? From Revolutionary Collaboration to Independent Statebuilding in Iran, Turkey, and the Soviet Republics, 1914-22

Program on Central Asia Lecture

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Kayhan Nejad (University of Oklahoma) examines the Jangalis' continuing attempts at internationalism, asking how they understood Iran's role within a broader revolutionary landscape and why their coalition-building efforts ultimately failed. In so doing, it interrogates the end of transnationalism in Gilan, and asks how Iranian monarchy withstood the political upheavals that remade the Soviet and Turkish republics.


Monday, April 21, 2025
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Bunche Hall, Rm 10383


In the first decade of the twentieth century, socialist and national liberationist volunteers moved across borders to join in the Russian Revolution of 1905, the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1905–11), and the Young Turk Revolution of 1908. United by shared ideas and visions of political remaking, these revolutionaries lent each other aid at critical moments, securing some victories against autocratic resistance.

By the outbreak of the First World War, the revolutionaries’ transnational solidarity had fractured. Ethnic tensions and competing national interests divided former allies, leading to conflict and, ultimately, genocide. Yet remnants of this earlier internationalism persisted in places like Iran’s northern Gilan province, where Mirza Kuchek Khan’s Jangal Insurgency (1914–21) formed alliances with both the Central Powers and the Bolsheviks. This talk examines the Jangalis’ continuing attempts at internationalism, asking how they understood Iran’s role within a broader revolutionary landscape and why their coalition-building efforts ultimately failed. In so doing, it interrogates the end of transnationalism in Gilan, and asks how Iranian monarchy withstood the political upheavals that remade the Soviet and Turkish republics.

Kayhan A. Nejad is the Farzaneh Family Assistant Professor of Iranian Studies at the University of Oklahoma. Nejad’s research centers on the linkages between Iran, the greater Middle East, and the former Soviet Union. His book manuscript, From the Oilfield to the Battlefield: Revolutionary Internationalism on the Imperial Borderlands, draws on sources in Persian, Russian, and modern and Ottoman Turkish to proffer a new explanation for the re-establishment of monarchy in Iran in 1921. His articles appear or are forthcoming in Slavic Review, Iranian Studies, Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, and Middle Eastern Studies.

Sponsor(s): Asia Pacific Center

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