Introduction: Rediscovering the global in the Portuguese Revolution - Rita Lucas Narra, Ricardo Noronha, Luís Trindade, and Pedro Ramos Pinto (New University of Lisbon, Portugal and University of Cambridge UK) Section I. Making a Revolution in an Age of Revolutions 1. 'Only technically European': the Portuguese Revolution and the spectre of the Third World - Rita Lucas Narra (New University of Lisbon, Portugal) 2. South by Southwest: Global Socialism and the Political Economy of the Portuguese Revolution (1974-1975) - Ricardo Noronha (New University of Lisbon, Portugal) 3. Cuba and the Portuguese Revolution: affinities, proximities, ruptures - Raquel Ribeiro (University of Edinburgh, UK) 4. Last hopes: the Portuguese Revolution and the crisis of the revolutionary left in the 1970s - Pedro Ramos Pinto (University of Cambridge, UK) Section II. Revolutionary Subjectivities 5. Portuguese Women during the Carnation Revolution: national context and global connections - Giulia Strippoli (New University of Lisbon, Portugal) 6.
'The Freest Country in the World': The Portuguese Revolution and the deep history of emancipation - Luís Trindade (New University of Lisbon, Portugal) 7. The contained and retained sexual revolution - Isabel Freire (University of Lisbon, Portugal) Section III. Between Global Cold War and Decolonisation 8. The colonial war and the end of Portuguese colonialism: trajectories and impacts - Miguel Cardina (University of Coimbra, Portugal) 9. 'We have with us the majority of the countries of the world': Portugal and the New Information and Communication Order - Rita Luís (New University of Lisbon, Portugal) 10. European Social Democracy and the Portuguese Revolution: a two-way influence - Alan Granadino (Complutense University of Madrid, Spain) 11. Momentous but unexceptional: writing the returnees back into the Portuguese Revolution - Christoph Kalter (University of Agder, Norway) Afterword: The Portuguese Revolution: Highpoint and Endpoint of a Transnational Mobilization Cycle (1956-1976) - Gerd-Rainer Horn (SciencesPo, Paris, France).