"Over the past decade, historians have finally begun to prise open the 'multiverse' of international institutions, revealing people, ideas, and practices we had long forgotten. Finally, we have a study that begins to fill a persistent gap: the role of people, ideas, and practices hailing from the Soviet Union. Porter's archival work is the foundation for an invaluable new contribution to our understanding of the history of internationalism that pushes us to overhaul our view of the Cold War and later twentieth century." -- Glenda Sluga, author of The Invention of International Order"In this original and fascinating study, Louis Porter shows how participation in UNESCO opened up new worlds of possibility and meaning for patriotic Soviet citizens-even for those who would never travel beyond the USSR's own borders. Reds in Blue reveals how world governance became an arena of both Cold War competition and cooperation as ordinary people on both sides of the Iron Curtain worked to build UNESC's networks of global solidarity and cross-cultural exchange. With its faithful attention to lived experience, Porter's book is an important contribution to studies of Soviet internationalism, Cold War cultural diplomacy, and of the UN's twentieth-century endeavors to promote peace within a persistently fractured and unruly world." -- Brigid O'Keeffe, Brooklyn College"This book is a well-written and groundbreaking account of Soviet internationalism during the Cold War. It demonstrates how a small elite of Soviet patriotic cosmopolitans influenced UNESCO and its member states and vice versa. Reds in Blue is a must-read for everyone interested in the history of the USSR and its international relations." -- Poul Duedahl, Aalborg University"In this remarkable book, Louis Porter demonstrates the surprising parallels that existed between Soviet internationalism and the ideals of world governance promoted by UNESCO and other non-communist international institutions. While Soviet history and the history of international organizations have long been approached separately, Porter shows how deeply they were intertwined." -- Rachel Applebaum, author of Empire of Friends: Soviet Power and Socialist Internationalism in Cold War Czechoslovakia