Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:439Hits:20448996Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID112142
Title ProperEnough of the great Napoleons!' Raja Mahendra Pratap's pan-Asian projects (1929-1939)
LanguageENG
AuthorStolte, Carolien
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper traces a set of interlinked Asianist networks through the activities of Mahendra Pratap, an Indian revolutionary exile who spent the majority of his life at various key anti-imperialist sites in Asia. Pratap envisioned a unified Asia free from colonial powers, but should be regarded as an anti-imperialist first and a nationalist second-he was convinced that India's independence would materialize naturally as a by-product of a federated Asia. Through forging strategic alliances in places as diverse as Moscow, Kabul, and Tokyo, he sought to achieve his goal of a united 'Pan-Asia'. In his view, Pan-Asia would be the first step towards a world federation, in which all the continents would become provinces in a new world order. His thought was an intricate patchwork of internationalist ideas circulating in the opening decades of the twentieth century, and his travels and political activities are viewed in this context. Pratap's exploration of the relationship between the local, the regional, and the global, from an Asian perspective, was one of many ways in which Asian elites and non-elites challenged the legitimacy of the political order in the interwar years.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No. 2; Mar 2012: p. 403-423
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No. 2; Mar 2012: p. 403-423
Key WordsMahendra Pratap ;  Asia ;  Great Napoleons ;  India ;  Pan - Asia