Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T02:04:56.299Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Chinese International of Nationalities: the Chinese Communist Party, the Comintern, and the foundation of the Malayan National Communist Party, 1923–1939*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2014

Anna Belogurova*
Affiliation:
Department of History, Brown University, 79 Brown Street, Providence, RI 02912, USA E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

In the global ideological movements of the early twentieth century, notably communism, new political concepts moved across different cultures. Together with the process of internationalization, this led to problems concerning the translation and interpretation of linguistic terms. Based on little-studied sources deposited in the Comintern archive in Moscow, this article shows that, although the members of the newly formed Malayan Communist Party (1930) were virtually all Chinese, it became the first organization to discuss directly the possibility of a multi-ethnic Malayan nation within the borders of the Malay Peninsula. As the Comintern encouraged the establishment of ‘national’ communist parties, the ambiguity of the Chinese word minzu resulted in the emergence of a discourse regarding the Malayan ‘nation’, which would be liberated from colonialism under communist leadership.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

I am grateful to Timothy Cheek, John Fitzgerald, Michael Hathaway, Liu Hong, Steven Hugh Lee, Yeh Wen-hsin, and the members of the China Studies Group at the University of British Columbia, as well as to two anonymous readers and the editors of this journal for their invaluable suggestions. My thanks also go to Yeap Chong Leng, Lin Hsiao-ting, Paul Alexander Rae, and Konstantin Tertitski for help in acquiring sources, to Craig Smith for useful discussions, and to Matthias von dem Knesebeck for translations from German.

References

1 Kheng, Cheah Boon, Red star over Malaya: resistance and social conflict during and after the Japanese occupation of Malaya, 1941–1946, Singapore: National University of Singapore, 2003Google Scholar, p. 3.

2 Anderson, Benedict, Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism, London: Verso, 1991, pp. 44–46Google Scholar.

3 For the MCP's ‘national’ outlook, see Sze-Chieh Ng, ‘Silenced revolutionaries: challenging the received view of Malaya's revolutionary past’, MA Thesis, Arizona State University, 2011, p. 21; Chin, C. C., ‘The revolutionary programmes and their effect on the struggle of the Malayan communist party’, in C. C. Chin and Karl Hack, eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng: new light on the Malayan Communist Party, Singapore: National University of Singapore, 2005, pp. 260278Google Scholar.

4 Robert, Dana L., ‘The first globalization: the internationalization of the Protestant missionary movement between the world wars’, in Ogbu Kalu, ed., Interpreting contemporary Christianity: global processes and local identities, Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 2008, pp. 93130Google Scholar.

5 Manela, Erez, The Wilsonian moment: self-determination and the international origins of anticolonial nationalism, New York: Oxford University Press, 2007CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Aydin, Cemil, The politics of anti-Westernism in Asia: visions of world order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian thought, New York: Columbia University Press, 2007Google Scholar, pp. 4, 201–3.

7 Winichakul, Thongchai, Siam mapped: a history of the geo-body of a nation, Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai‘i Press, 1994Google Scholar; Henley, David, ‘Ethnogeographic integration and exclusion in anticolonial nationalism: Indonesia and Indochina’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 37, 2, 1995, pp. 286324Google Scholar.

8 Conrad, Sebastian and Mühlhahn, Klaus, ‘Global mobility and nationalism: Chinese migration and the re-territorialization of belonging, 1880–1910’, in Sebastian Conrad and Dominic Sachsenmaier, eds., Competing visions of world order: global moments and movements, 1880s–1930s, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007, pp. 181212CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 Goscha, Christopher E., Going Indochinese: contesting concepts of space and place in French Indochina, Copenhagen: NIAS, 2012Google Scholar; Ong, Aihwa and Nonini, Donald, Ungrounded empires: the cultural politics of modern Chinese transnationalism, New York: Routledge, 1997Google Scholar.

10 Sun Zhongshan [Sun Yatsen], ‘Sanminzhuyi: Minzuzhuyi (Three principles: nationalism)’, lecture 4, 17 February 1924, in Sun zhongshan quan ji (Collected works of Sun Zhongshan), 11 vols., Beijing: Zhong hua shuju, 1986, vol. 9, pp. 220–31, esp. p. 226; Jianshu, Wu, ‘Cong da Yazhou zhuyi zouxiang shijie datong zhuyi: lulun Sun Zhongshan de guoji zhuyi sixiang (From Pan-Asianism to world great harmony: Sun Yatsen's internationalism)’, Jindaishi yanjiu (Studies in Modern History), 3, 1997Google Scholar, pp. 18398; Yoshihiro, Ishikawa, The formation of the Chinese Communist Party, trans. Joshua Fogel, New York: Columbia University Press, 2012Google Scholar, ch. 2, pp. 131–2; Fitzgerald, John, Awakening China: politics, culture, and class in the Nationalist revolution, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1998Google Scholar, p. 347; Jilin, Xu, ‘May Fourth: a patriotic movement of cosmopolitanism’, Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies, 9, 1, 2009, pp. 2962Google Scholar.

11 Liu, Hong, ‘Old linkages, new networks: the globalization of overseas Chinese voluntary associations and its implications’, China Quarterly, 155, 1998, pp. 582609CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Tolz, Vera, Russia's own orient: the politics of identity and oriental studies in the late imperial and Soviet periods, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 134167CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Esherick, Joseph, ‘How the Qing became China’, in Joseph Esherick, Hasan Kayalı, and Eric Van Young, eds., Empire to nation: historical perspectives on the making of the modern world, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2006, pp. 229259Google Scholar.

13 Karl, Rebecca E., Staging the world: Chinese nationalism at the turn of the twentieth century, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002, pp. 83150Google Scholar.

14 Harrington, Fred H., ‘The anti-imperialist movement in the United States, 1898–1900’, Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 22, 2, 1935, pp. 211230CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Karl, , Staging the world, pp. 113114Google Scholar, 169–73.

15 Sun Yatsen, ‘Dui shenhu shanghuiyisuo deng tuanti de yan shuo (The address to the Chamber of Commerce and other organizations of Kobe)’, 28 November 1924, in Collected works, vol. 11, pp. 401–9, esp. p. 409.

16 Piazza, Hans, ‘Anti-imperialist League and the Chinese revolution’, in Mechthild Leutner et al., eds., The Chinese revolution in the 1920s: between triumph and disaster, London: Routledge, 2002, pp. 166176Google Scholar.

17 Hoover Archives, Hankou dang'an (Hankou Collection), reel 64, file 7625.1, ‘Dongfang beiyapo lianhehui shang zhongzhihui cheng (A letter from the Union of the Oppressed Peoples of the East to the Central Committee of the GMD)’, 23 July 1927.

18 Quinn-Judge, Sophie, Ho Chi Minh: the missing years, 1919–1941, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2003Google Scholar, pp. 135, 167.

19 David P. Barrett translated this as ‘Nationalist International’ in ‘Marxism, the Communist Party, and the Soviet Union: three critiques by Hu Hanmin’, Chinese Studies in History, 14, 2, 1980–1, pp. 47–73.

20 Hu Hanmin, ‘Minzu guoji yu disan guoji (International of Nationalities and Communist International)’, in Hu Hanmin shiji ziliao huji (The works of Hu Hanmin), vol. 4, ed. Cuncui xueshe, Xianggang: Dadong tushu gongsi, 1980, pp. 1395–1401, esp. pp. 1400–1.

21 Alex Cook ‘Third world Maoism’, in Timothy Cheek, ed., A critical introduction to Mao, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010, pp. 288–312Google Scholar.

22 ‘Draft program of the CCP’, April 1928, in M. L. Titarenko and M. Leutner, eds., VKP(b), Komintern i Kitai. Documenty. VKP(b), Komintern i sovetskoye dvizheniye v Kitae. 1931–1937. T.3 Chast 1 (All-Russia Communist Party (Bolshevik), Comintern and China. Documents. The Comintern and the soviet movement in China, 1931–1937), vol. 3, part 1, Moscow, 1999, pp. 364–71.

23 Quinn-Judge, , Ho Chi Minh, pp. 156157Google Scholar; The Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History, (Rossiyskiy gosudarstvenniy Arhiv Sotsio-politicheskoi istorii), Moscow, (henceforth, RGASPI), 514/1/634/93–158, ‘The minutes of the third representative conference of Nanyang’, 22–23 April 1930, esp. pp. 134, 144–6; RGASPI, 534/4/549/25–7, anon., ‘Malay’, 18 November 1930. Ho's authorship is established based on the contents of the report. FEB letter to the ECCI, 3 March 1930, in Titarenko and Leutner, Comintern and China, vol. 3, part 2, pp. 822–3.

24 British Colonial Office records (henceforth, CO), 273-534, ‘Monthly bulletin of political intelligence’, January 1926, p. 1.

25 Yong, C. F., The origins of Malayan communism, Singapore: South Sea Society, 1997, pp. 6269Google Scholar.

26 Khoo Kai Kym, ‘The beginnings of political extremism in Malaya, 1915–1935’, PhD Thesis, University of Malaya, 1973, p. 312; CO, 273-542, ‘Kuo Min Tan and other societies in Malaya (continued), July–September 1928’, 23 October 1928, pp. 9–10.

27 Fowler, Josephine, Japanese and Chinese immigrant activists organizing in American and international communist movements, 1919–1933, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2007, pp. 145146CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Xuanzhang, Hu, ed., Ziqiang bu xi hou de zai wu – qinghua jingshen xun li (Self-discipline and social commitment are Tsinghua spirit), Beijing: Qinghua daxue chubanshe, 2010Google Scholar.

28 Hu, ‘International of Nationalities’.

29 ‘Pismo Li Lisanya Zhou Enlayu i Tsyui Tsyubo (Li Lisan's letter to Zhou Enlai and Qu Qiubai)’, 17 April 1930, in Titarenko and Leutner, Comintern and China, vol. 3, part 2, pp. 865–8.

30 Ibid.

31 Xuxuan, Liu and Shicheng, Shu, Zhonghua minzu tuozhi Nanyang shi (The history of the Chinese colonization of the Nanyang), Shanghai: Guoli bianyi guan, 1935Google Scholar.

32 Quinn-Judge, , Ho Chi Minh, p. 135Google Scholar; Chor, So Wai, The Kuomintang Left in the National revolution, 1924–1931: the leftist alternative in republican China, New York: Oxford University Press, 1991, pp. 8485Google Scholar, 92, 234; Li Yinghui, Huaqiao zhengce yu haiwai minzuzhuyi (1912–1949) (The origin of overseas Chinese nationalism, 1912–1949), Taipei: Guoshiguan, 1997, pp. 506–7.

33 RGASPI, 495/154/700/23–5, ‘Guiding principles in the colonial question, by Tan Malaka’, 1923.

34 Edwards, Hayes B., The practice of diaspora: literature, translation, and the rise of black internationalism, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003Google Scholar, p. 29; Piazza, ‘Anti-imperialist League’; Gallicchio, Marc, The African American encounter with Japan and China: black internationalism in Asia, 1895–1945, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2000, p. 68Google Scholar; Becker, Marc, ‘Mariátegui, the Comintern, and the indigenous question in Latin America’, Science & Society, 70, 4, October 2006, pp. 450–479CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 Hirsch, Francine, Empire of nations: ethnographic knowledge and the making of the Soviet Union, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005Google Scholar.

36 Manela, Wilsonian moment.

37 Kuhn, Philip A., Chinese among others: emigration in modern times, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008, pp. 4552Google Scholar.

38 Becker, ‘Mariátegui’.

39 Aydin, , Politics of anti-Westernism, pp. 145149Google Scholar.

40 Shestoi kongress Kominterna, Stenograficheskiy otchet. Vyp. 4, Revolutsionniye dvizheniye v kolonnialnyh i polukolonial'nyh stranah (The sixth Comintern congress, stenographical report. Vol. 4: revolutionary movement in colonial and semi-colonial countries), Moscow and Leningrad: Gosudarstvennoie izdatelstvo, 1929, p. 24.

41 Vatlin, Alexander and Smith, Stephen A., ‘The Comintern’, in Stephen A. Smith, ed., The Oxford handbook of the history of communism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 187194Google Scholar.

42 ‘Report of Comrade H. Maring to the Executive’, 11 July 1922, in Tony Saich, The origins of the first United Front in China: the role of Sneevliet (alias Maring), Leiden: Brill, 1991, pp. 305–23.

43 RGASPI, 534/4/106/1–2, Hassan [Tan Malaka], Letter, 7 July 1924.

44 Shiraishi, Takashi, An age in motion: popular radicalism in Java, 1912–1926, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1990Google Scholar; RGASPI, 495/214/700/32–6, Popov, ‘Gollandskaya India (Dutch Indies)’, 17 December 1923.

45 RGASPI, 495/154/700/8, 8ob., Grigory Voitinsky (Head of the Eastern Secretariat), ‘Spravka (A Note)’, 1923.

46 Tan Malaka only cited Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch-Inndie, 2nd edn, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1917–39, without providing his own account of the events: see Tan Malaka, From jail to jail, trans. and introduced by Helen Jarvis, Athens, OH: Ohio University Center for International Studies, 1991, vol. 1, pp. 103–6, 109–15, 245 n. 18.

47 Kheng, Cheah Boon, From PKI to the Comintern, 1924–1941: the apprenticeship of the Malayan Communist Party: selected documents and discussion, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1992, p. 9Google Scholar.

48 RGASPI, 534/4/106/9, Tan Malaka's letters, 7 July and 16 September 1924; Hanrahan, Gene Z., The communist struggle in Malaya, New York: Institute of Pacific Relations, 1954, p. 9Google Scholar; CO, 273–572, Monthly Review of Chinese Affairs (henceforth, MRCA), December 1931, p. 6.

49 McVey, Ruth Thomas, The rise of Indonesian communism, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1965, p. 231CrossRefGoogle Scholar; RGASPI, 495/214/3/123–4, Santos [Alimin], ‘Brief description of my activities in the past’, 10 January 1939; RGASPI, 495/214/3/161–5, Santos [Alimin], untitled.

50 RGASPI, 495/62/2/1–2, ECCI letter to the FEB, 23 October 1930.

51 RGASPI, 495/62/3/1–10, ‘Resolutions adopted at the third congress of Malaya Party’, 22–23 April 1930.

52 Gang, Zhao, The Qing opening to the ocean: Chinese maritime policies, 1684–1757, Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2013, pp. 45Google Scholar, 188–90; Kuhn, , Chinese among others, pp. 250282Google Scholar.

53 Wang Gungwu, ‘Tonghua, guihua, and history of the overseas Chinese’, in Ng Lun Ngai-ha and Chang Chak Yan, eds., Overseas Chinese in Asia between the two world wars, Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1989, pp. 11–23.

54 Lock, Tan Cheng, ‘Extract from Mr. Tan Cheng Lock's speech at the meeting of the legislative council held on 1st November 1926’, in Malayan problems from the Chinese point of view, Singapore: Tannaco, 1947, pp. 8893Google Scholar, esp. p. 90.

55 Ratnam, K. J., Communalism and the political process in Malaya, Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press, 1965, p. 9Google Scholar; Gungwu, Wang, ‘The limits of Nanyang Chinese nationalism, 1912–1937’, in C. D. Cowan and O. W. Wolters, eds., Southeast Asian history and historiography, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1976, pp. 405–423Google Scholar.

56 Yong, C. F., ‘An overview of the Malayan communist movement to 1942’, in Chin and Hack, Dialogues, pp. 247251Google Scholar; Akashi, Yoji, ‘The Nanyang Chinese anti-Japanese and boycott movement, 1908–1928: a study of Nanyang Chinese nationalism’, Journal of the South Seas Society, 23, 1968, p. 77Google Scholar.

57 He Pingping, Xu Jie koushu (Oral history of Xu Jie), Shanghai: Huadong shifan daxue chubanshe, 1997, pp. 149–51, 171–217; Kenley, David, New culture in a new world: the May Fourth movement and the Chinese diaspora in Singapore (1919–1932), New York: Routledge, 2003, pp. 157–176Google Scholar, 180–1 n. 50.

58 Jie, Xu, ‘Liangge qingnian (Two youths)’, in Yezi yu liulian: yiming Nanyang manji (Coconut and Durian: Nanyang Travel Notes), Shijia zhuang: Hebei jiaoyu chubanshe, 1994, pp. 1627Google Scholar, esp. p. 27.

59 RGASPI, 495/62/12/3, 3ob., 4, ‘To the Malayan comrades’, Letter from the FEB to the MCP, 17 December 1930.

60 RGASPI, 495/154/372/26–40, ‘Vystupleniye Raitera o polozhenii Spetssectora KUTV na 7 fevr. 1929 goda na zasedanii kollegii vostochnogo seckretariata (Raiter's address about the situation in the special sector of KUTV on 7 February 1929 at the meeting of the Collegiate of the Eastern Secretariat)’.

61 RGASPI, 533/10/1818/5, ‘Report from Nanyang’; Xu, ‘Two youths’.

62 He, Xu Jie, pp. 173–5.

63 Gungwu, Wang, limits’, ‘The, pp. 417419Google Scholar.

64 Duara, Prasenjit, ‘Transnationalism and the predicament of sovereignty: China, 1900–1945’, American Historical Review, 102, 4, October 1997, pp. 10301051CrossRefGoogle Scholar, esp. p. 1043.

65 RGASPI 495/62/2/1–2, Letter of the ECCI to the FEB, 23 October 1930; Hanrahan, Communist struggle, pp. 38–9.

66 ‘To the Malayan comrades’.

67 Yong, , Origins, pp. 78Google Scholar, 160; ‘Resolution’, RGASPI 495/62/1/23.

68 CO, 273–538, ‘Message to the overseas Chinese in respect of the second anniversary of the death of Sun Chung San [Sun Yatsen]’.

69 Ren, Guixiang, Zhao, Hongying, and Shi, Mao, eds., Hua qiao huqren yu guogong guanxi (Chinese overseas and the CCP–GMD relations), Wuhan: Wuhan chubanshe, 1999, p. 80Google Scholar; Perry, Elizabeth J., Anyuan: mining China's revolutionary tradition, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2012, pp. 8586Google Scholar, 148.

70 RGASPI, 495/62/1/1–17, ‘V tsentral'nyi komitet (To the Central Committee)’, A report by the Nanyang Provisional Committee (vremennyi komitet malayskogo arhipelaga) to the Central Committee of the CCP, 19 July and 22 August 1928.

71 Zhonggong zhongyang dangshi yanjiu shi di yi yanjiubu bian, ed., Li Lisan bainian dancheng jinianji (100th anniversary of Li Lisan: collected writings), Beijing: Zhonggongdangshi chubanshe, 1999, p. 68–9.

72 RGASPI, 514/1/532/8–13, ‘A letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to Nanyang Provisional Committee’, 22 January 1929, pp. 8–9, 13.

73 Ibid., p. 10.

74 Stenograficheskiy otchet VI kongressa Kominterna (Stenographic report of the 6th congress of the Comintern), Leningrad: Gosudarstvennoye izdatelstvo, 1929, issue 5, p. 143, issue 4, p. 414.

75 ‘A letter from the Central Committee’, p. 13.

76 RGASPI, 495/62/18/42–53, Letter to the MCP from the Eastern Secretariat of the Comintern, 14 April 1931, esp. p. 42.

77 ‘A letter from the Central Committee’, p. 10.

78 He, Xu Jie, pp. 170–7.

79 Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern; Yong, Origins, pp. 131–4; Onraet, René H., Singapore: a police background, London: Dorothy Crisp, 1947Google Scholar, p. 109; Hara, Fujio, ‘Dier ci shijie dazhan qiande malaiya gongchandang (The MCP before the Second World War)’, Nanyang ziliao yicong (Southeast Asian Studies), 4, 2005, pp. 5670Google Scholar; Quinn-Judge, , Ho Chi Minh, p. 168Google Scholar. One exception to this view is McLane, Charles, Soviet strategies in Southeast Asia, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1966, pp. 202203CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

80 ‘Pismo A.E. Albrehta I.A. Pyatnitskomu (The letter of A. E. Albreht to I. A. Pyatnitskiy)’, 1 May 1928, in Titarenko and Leutner, Comintern and China, vol. 3, part 1, pp. 381–4.

81 ‘To the Malayan comrades’.

82 RGASPI, 495/62/2/1–2, Letter of the ECCI to the FEB, 23 October 1930.

83 RGASPI, 514/1/634/93–158, ‘Minutes of the third representative conference’, pp. 109, 130, 136–7; RGASPI, 514/1/634/86–92, ‘Protokol der 3. Delegierten Konferenz von Nanyang (Malayische Jureln)’; RGASPI, 495/62/3/1–10, ‘Resolutions adopted at the third congress’.

84 ‘A report showing the connection between Chinese and non-Chinese concerned in communist activities in Malaya’, 1 April 1930, CO273/561/72074, cited in Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, pp. 53–6.

85 RGASPI, 534/4/549/25–7, Ho Chih Minh's report, 18 November 1930; RGASPI, 495/62/11/27–9, ‘Report from Malay’, 2 January 1931; RGASPI, 495/62/11/1–4, ‘To the CC of the Chinese party and Comintern’ (undated report); RGASPI, 495/62/7/2–4, ‘Informatsiya o Malaiskih Shtatah (Information about Malay states)’, 3 October 1930.

86 ‘Information about Malay states’, p. 3; RGASPI, 495/62/6/17–21, Wang Yung Hai, ‘To the Far Eastern Bureau’.

87 RGASPI, 495/62/2/6–7, FEB's letter to Ducroux, 20 May 1931.

88 Milner, Anthony, The invention of politics in colonial Malaya: contesting nationalism and the expansion of public sphere, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994Google Scholar, ch. 3, esp. p. 64.

89 RGASPI, 495/62/11/1–4, ‘To the CC of the Chinese party and Comintern’, p. 2.

90 ‘RGASPI, 514/1/634/93–158, ‘Minutes of the third representative conference’, pp. 144–6; RGASPI 495/214/752/40–1, Alimin, Letters of 23 April and 29 September 1930; 86; Santos, ‘Brief description’; RGASPI, 495/214/3/161–5, Santos, untitled; RGASPI, 495/214/3/35–7, Santos, ‘Svedeniya o Malake (Information about Malaka)’, 7 June 1939; RGASPI, 495/214/752/53–76, Musso, ‘Situatsiya v Indonesii posle vosstaniya (The situation in Indonesia after the uprising)’, 22 September 1930.

91 Roff, William, The origins of Malay nationalism, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1967, pp. 224225Google Scholar, 255.

92 Tan Liok Ee, ‘The rhetoric of bangsa and minzu: community and nation in tension, the Malay Peninsula, 1900–1955’, Monash University, working paper 52, Clayton, Australia: Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, 1988.

93 Hans J. van de Ven, ‘The emergence of the text-centered party’, in Tony Saich and Hans J. Van de Ven, eds., New perspectives on the Chinese communist revolution, Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1995, pp. 5–32Google Scholar; Hanrahan, , Communist struggle, p. 9Google Scholar; CO, 273-572, MRCA, December 1931, pp. 31–2, 55; CO, 273-572, MRCA, October 1931, pp. 44–5.

94 I am borrowing here from Koselleck, Reinhart, ‘Begriffsgeschichte and social history’, in Futures past: on the semantics of historical time, Cambridge, MA: Michigan Institute of Technology, 1985, pp. 7391Google Scholar.

95 Yamamoto, Hiroyuki, Milner, Anthony, Kawashima, Midori, and Arai, Kazuhiko, eds., Bangsa and umma: development of people-grouping concepts in Islamized Southeast Asia, Japan: Kyoto University Press, 2011Google Scholar; Reid, Anthony, ‘Melayu as a source of diverse modern identities’, in Timothy Barnard, ed., Contesting Malayness: Malay identity across boundaries, Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2004, pp. 124Google Scholar.

96 Tan, ‘Rhetoric of bangsa and minzu’, pp. 27–8; ‘A letter from the Central Committee’, p. 10.

97 ‘21 usloviye priyema v Komintern (21 conditions of acceptance into the Comintern)’, 2nd edn, introduction by Pyatnitskiy, Izdatelstvo TsK VKP(b), 1934.

98 Tan, ‘Rhetoric of bangsa and minzu’, p. 34.

99 Goscha, Christopher E., Thailand and the Southeast Asian networks of the Vietnamese revolution, 1885–1954, London: Curzon Press, 1999Google Scholar.

100 ‘A letter from the Central Committee’, p. 12.

101 RGASPI, 495/62/3/1–10, ‘Resolutions adopted at the third congress’, p. 8.

102 Ibid., p. 4.

103 ‘To the Malayan comrades’.

104 ‘A letter from the Central Committee’; RGASPI, 495/62/1/1–17, ‘To the Central Committee’.

105 RGASPI, 514/1/634/93–158, ‘Minutes of the third representative conference’, pp. 118–19.

106 RGASPI, 495/62/1/23–7, ‘Resolyutsiya priniataya posle obsledovaniya raboty vremenogo komiteta v 1929 (Resolution adopted after investigation of the work of the [Nanyang] Provisional Committee in 1929)’.

107 RGASPI, 514/1/632/7–28, ‘Otchet or polozhenii v Nanyane (Report about the situation in Nanyang)’, January 1930.

108 RGASPI, 514/1/634/93–158, ‘Minutes of the third representative conference’, p. 120.

109 RGASPI, 533/10/1818/3–29, ‘Nanyang de baogao: a report of Indonesia, Jan. 16, 1929’; RGASPI, 495/62/1/1–17, ‘Otchet Malayskogo Komiteta profsoyuzov (The report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay archipelago)’; ‘To the Malayan comrades’.

110 Zhongguo yu Nanyang (China and Malaysia), [Bulletin of Jinan University], 1, 1918, in Kequn, Meng, ed., Nanyang shiliao xubian (Compilation of Nanyang historical materials), Beijing: Guojia tushuguan chubanshe, 2010Google Scholar, vol. 1, p. 1; RGASPI, 495/62/24/46–7, ‘List of circulars issued by the C.C. of the C.P. of Malaysia’.

111 RGASPI, 495/62/22/13–13ob., ‘Pismo Ts.K. Malayskoy K.P. o VII kongresse i.t.d. (The letter to the CC MCP about the 7th congress of the Comintern etc.)’, 1 June 1934.

112 Roff, , Origins, p. 208Google Scholar.

113 ‘To the Malayan comrades’; RGASPI, 495/62/13/31–2, ‘Zhongyang tonggao disi hao (Central Committee circular no. 4)’, 10 August 1930; RGASPI, 495/62/23/84–93, ‘Gongren ying zuo shenmo shiqing (What workers should do)’, 15 November 1930.

114 RGASPI, 495/62/13/36–8, ‘Zhongyang tonggao diqi hao (Central Committee circular no. 7)’, 15 September 1930.

115 ‘What workers should do’, p. 86; RGASPI, 495/62/5/9–20, ‘What the workers should stand for’, esp. p. 10.

116 CO, 273-572, ‘A review of the misery of the weak races of the East’, from Wenhua banniankan (Culture Biannual), February 1931, in MRCA, June 1931, pp. 49–51.

117 C. F. Yong, comment in ‘Early history of the Malayan Communist Party’, in Chin and Hack, Dialogues, p. 72.

118 Yu Yueting, ‘Ma Ning yige beiyiwang de liao bu chao de ‘zuoyi’ zuojia (Ma Ning: a forgotten extraordinary left-wing writer)’, in Ting, Zhao, ed., Shifan qun ying guanghui zhonghua (diershi juan) (Teachers heroes, shining China. Vol. 20), Xi'an: Shaanxi renmin jiaoyu chubanshe, 1994, pp. 176185Google Scholar.

119 CO, 273-585, MRCA, March 1933, pp. 21, 24.

120 Tan Cheng Lock's address at the legislative council, Malacca, 12 February 1934 , in Malayan problems, pp. 95–109, esp. pp. 95–7.

121 RGASPI, 495/62/20/1–6, ‘Magong lianzi tonggao di yi hao. Dantuan zhongyang guanyu waiqiao dengji lülie yu womende gongzuo de jueyi (MCP Central Circular no. 1. Resolution regarding the Alien Registration Ordinance)’, 12 October 1932.

122 Francis Kok-Wah Loh, Beyond the tin mines: coolies, squatters, and New Villagers in the Kinta Valley, Malaysia, c. 1880–1980, Singapore: Oxford University Press, 1988, p. 33.

123 Kuhn, Chinese among others.

124 RGASPI, 495/62/28/18–36, ‘Magong dier ci zhong zhihui yi yijuean (The resolutions of the second plenum of the Executive Committee of the Central Committee of the MCP)’, 20 February 1940.

125 RGASPI, 495/62/27/1–5, ‘Magong lai jian (A document received from the MCP)’, 25 August 1934; RGASPI, 495/62/22/1–7, Guo Guang, ‘Magong lai xin san hao (A letter from the MCP no. 3)’, 24 March 1934.

126 RGASPI, 495/62/24/13–16ob., ‘Report of Labour Federation of Malaya no. 1 to the Profintern’.

127 CO, 273-580, MRCA, October 1932, p. 37; RGASPI, 495/62/27/7, ‘Malai zhongyang laijian (A document received from the Central Committee of the MCP)’, 25 August 1934.

128 CO, 273-572, MRCA, December 1931, pp. 31–48; RGASPI, 495/62/22/14–17, Central Committee of the MCP, ‘Surat yang terbuka kepada saudara-saudara kita malayu dan Indian (An open letter to our Malay and Indian brothers)’, 1934; CO, 273-616, Straits Settlement Police Special Branch, ‘Review of communism in Malaya during 1934’, Political Intelligence Journal, 31 December 1934, pp. 2, 3.

129 Guo, ‘Letter from the MCP, no. 3’, p. 5.

130 CO, 273-630, ‘Supplement no. 1 of 1937 to the Straits Settlements Police Special Branch Political Intelligence Journal: review of communist activities in Malaya, 1936’, pp. 3, 4; CO, 273-630, ‘Straits Settlement Police Special Branch report for the year 1936’, p. 7.

131 RGASPI, 495/62/29/65–86, ‘Sokraschenniy perevod broshury Malaya segonya sostavlennoi na kitayskom yazyke, 1939 (Abridged translation of brochure “Malaya today”, composed in Chinese, 1939)’.

132 Cheah, , Red star, pp. 71Google Scholar, 322 n. 37.

133 McVey, Rise of Indonesian communism.

134 ‘Early history of the Malayan Communist Party’, p. 74, n. 13.

135 Guo, ‘Letter from the MCP no. 3’, p. 5; Shanghai Municipal Police Files (henceforth, SMP), D6152, ‘Letter from Guo Guang to the FEB, 15 August 1934, pp. 1–6.

136 SMP, D6954, ‘Letter from H.B.M. Consulate-General concerning Malayan communists’, 30 August 1935.

137 RGASPI, 495/62/28/53–84, ‘Maijin (Forward)’, December 1939–early 1941.

138 Belogurova, Anna, ‘The civic world of international communism: the Taiwanese communists and the Comintern (1921–1931)’, Modern Asian Studies, 46, 6, 2012, pp. 16021632CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Arsan, Andrew, Lewis, Su Lin, and Richard, Anne I., ‘Editorial: the roots of global civil society and the interwar moment’, Journal of Global History, 7, 2, 2012, pp. 157165CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

139 See Liu, Lydia, The clash of empires: the invention of China in modern world making, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006Google Scholar.

140 RGASPI, 495/14/385/12, ‘Dokladnaya zapiska politicheskoi komissii IKKI (The report of the political commission of the Eastern Secretariat of the ECCI)’, 27 July 1935; SMP, D7376, Letter of the Siamese Communist Party to the MCP, 5 March 1936; Guo, ‘Letter from the MCP no. 3’, p. 6.