We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Asianism and the Fall of Empire
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
17 March 2026

Offering a new global perspective on modern Indian history, Asianism and the Fall of Empire identifies the rise of Asianism in the early twentieth century as the origin and primary driving force of resistance movements that brought down the British Empire. Mithi Mukherjee ties together into a single sweeping narrative two contrasting, conflicting forms of anticolonialism: the emergence of nonviolent resistance movement under Mahatma Gandhi in South Africa and the militant movement culminating in the war on British India by the Indian National Army under Bose in alliance with the Japanese army. Asia emerges in this breakthrough retelling not as an inert geographical category, but instead as a singular agent of change in modern world history.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Asianism and Civilizational Sovereignty in Post-1857 India
2. Asia Rears Its Head: The Rise of Japan and the Anglo-American Response
3. The Russo-Japanese War and the Rise of Militant Geopolitical Asianism
4. Racism and the Asian Immigrant: Gandhi in South Africa
5. The Amritsar Massacre and Asianism in the Interwar Years
6. Empire on the Edge: Gandhi, Bose, and the Second World War
7. The Final Assault: The Indo-Japanese Invasion and the Fall of Empire
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index