000 01461nam a22001457a 4500
020 _a0521550173
082 _a954.0359
_bLOW/B
100 _aLow, D.A
245 _aBritain and Indian Nationalism, 1929-1942 : imprint of ambiguity
260 _aUnited Kingdom
_bCUP
_c1997
300 _axv;358p.
520 _aIndia's struggle for independence was arguably the most momentous of the twentieth century, and central to it was the generation of powerful nationalist forces. In a series of detailed studies Anthony Low shows how the ambiguity of the British position conditioned the distinctive character of this struggle: how the British determination to hold fast their Indian empire (unlike the Americans in the Philippines) prior to 1942 was nonetheless complemented by a reluctance to resist their nationalist opponents in the unyielding ways of the French in Vietnam and the Dutch in Indochina. Much that Gandhi did, Professor Low concludes, would have been unnecessary in the Philippines and impossible in Indonesia and Vietnam, but astutely fitted the peculiar conditions of the nationalist struggle against the British in India. Published on the fiftieth anniversary of Indian independence, Britain and Indian Nationalism makes a major contribution to the historiography of modern India, to Britain's relations with its empire, and to the history of decolonisation in the twentieth century.
650 _aNationalism
_aPolitics and government
942 _cBK
999 _c62075
_d62075