From the Ruins of Empire

The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia

hardcover, 368 pages

Published Sept. 4, 2012 by Doubleday Canada.

ISBN:
978-0-385-67610-6
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3 stars (2 reviews)

A little more than a century ago, as the Japanese navy annihilated the giant Russian one at the Battle of Tsushima, original thinkers across Asia, working independently, sought to frame a distinctly Asian intellectual tradition that would inform and inspire the continent's anticipated rise to dominance. Asian dominance did not come to pass, and those thinkers - Tagore, Gandhi, and later Nehru in India; Liang Qichao and Sun Yatsen in China; Jamal al-Din al-Afghani and Abdurreshi al Ibrahim in the ruins of the Ottoman Empire - are seen as outriders from the main anticolonial tradition. But Pankaj Mishra shows that it was otherwise in this stereotype-shattering book. His enthralling group portrait of like minds scattered across a vast continent makes clear that modern Asia's revolt against the West is not the one led by faith-fired terrorists and thwarted peasants but one with deep roots in the work of thinkers who …

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3 stars

"From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia" by Pankaj Mishra is an engaging intellectual history which looks at the history of Asian responses to Western imperialism and Westernization in the 19th and 20th centuries. What makes it particularly interesting is how Mishra is able to use the two lesser-known historical figures - Jamal al-Din al-Afghani and Liang Qichao - to show the way in which intellectuals across Asia in various places were engaging in the same basic question: how should Asian societies respond simultaneously to the breakdown of their societies and traditions and to Westernization and modernization. Each one dealt with the question differently given their cultures or national circumstances but all were fundamentally dealing with the same question. On a broader level, Mishra seeks to argue is that critiques of modernization and Westernization go back much further than historians typically argue …

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