South Asia Unbound

South Asia Unbound

New International Histories of the Subcontinent

  • Author: Guyot-Réchard, Bérénice; Leake, Elisabeth
  • Publisher: Leiden University Press
  • Serie: Global Connections: Routes and Roots
  • ISBN: 9789087284091
  • eISBN Pdf: 9789400604544
  • Place of publication:  Holland , Netherlands
  • Year of digital publication: 2023
  • Month: April
  • Pages: 324
  • Language: English
Whose international matters, and why? How are geographic regions constructed? What are the channels of engagement between a place, its people, its institutions, and the world? How do we understand the non-West’s influence in contemporary global interactions? From humanitarianism and activism to diplomacy and institutional networks, South Asia has been a crucial place for the elaboration of international politics, even before the twentieth century. South Asia Unbound gathers an interdisciplinary group of scholars from across the world to investigate South Asian global engagement at the local, regional, national, and supra-national levels, spanning the time before and after independence. Only by understanding its past entanglements with the world can we understand South Asia’s increasing global importance today.
  • Cover
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Illustrations
    • Fig. 4.1. Battle of Arakan, 1943: A Sampan Convoy on the Mayu River, by Anthony Gross (Imperial War Museum, London, Art.IWM ART LD 3340)
    • Fig. 4.2. Map of British and Japanese forces in Cox’s Bazaar-Maungdaw area on 17 February 1944 (UK National Archives, Kew, PREM 3/148/3, Arakan Operations, Feb-Mar. 1944)
    • Fig. 5.1. Antonio Cecil Pereira’s passport application (Kerala State Archives Confidential Section, Thiruvananthapuram)
    • Fig. 5.2. Cecil Pereira’s home in Thumba, Thiruvananthapuram, in former Travancore (Kalyani Ramnath)
    • Fig. 10.1. Portrait of Dr. B.S. Moonje at the Indian Round Table Conference Second Session, 1931 (British Library, T 11187)
    • Fig. 13.1. Portrait of Phyllis Naidoo (Daily News)
    • Fig. 13.2. The first nineteen volunteers to take part in the 1946 passive resistance campaign (Gandhi-Luthuli Documentation Centre, Durban, South Africa)
    • Fig. 13.3. A family reunited: Phyllis and her husband MD Naidoo with sons Sahdhan and Shah, and daughter Sukhthi facing away from the camera. (Nirode Bramdaw, 1860 Heritage Centre)
    • Fig. 13.4. Phyllis Naidoo looking out from her window with her three children during her time under house arrest in Durban, 1971. (Gandhi-Luthuli Documentation Centre, Durban, South Africa)
  • List of Contributors
  • Acknowledgements
  • Acronyms and Abbreviations
  • Introduction. South Asia Unbound
    • Elisabeth Leake and Bérénice Guyot-Réchard
  • Part I. (Inter)national Orders and State Futures
    • Chapter 1. A Thwarted “Westphalian Moment” in South Asia? The Triple Alliance against Tipu Sultan
      • Tanja Bührer
    • Chapter 2. “Nothing in Common with ‘Indian’ India:” Bhutan and the Cabinet Mission Plan
      • Swati Chawla
    • Chapter 3. Extra-territorial Self-determination: East African Decolonization and the Indian Annexation of Goa
      • Lydia Walker
  • Part II. From the Transimperial to the International: Lived Uncertainties
    • Chapter 4. Battlefields to Borderlands: Rohingyas between Global War and Decolonization
      • Jayita Sarkar1
    • Chapter 5. Other Partitions: Migrant Geographies and Disconnected Histories between India and Malaya, 1945-1965
      • Kalyani Ramnath
    • Chapter 6. Re-Uniting Split Families: The 1972 Ugandan Asian Refugees and the Internationalization of an Imperial Diaspora
      • Ria Kapoor
  • Part III. South Asian Roots of the International
    • Chapter 7. An “Indian Hermes” between Paris and the Pacific: Kalidas Nag, Greater India, and the Quest for a Global Humanism
      • Yorim Spoelder
    • Chapter 8. Fellow Travelers: Global Decolonization and Gandhian Peace Work
      • Carolien Stolte
    • Chapter 9. The Islamist International in Lahore: The Jamaat-i Islami, the Middle East, and the Quest for an Islamic State
      • Simon Wolfgang Fuchs
  • Part IV. Ambivalences and Sensibilities of Internationalism
    • Chapter 10. Hindu Nationalism in the International: B.S. Moonje’s Travel Writing at the Round Table Conference
      • Stephen Legg
    • Chapter 11. Culture and Progressivism in Pakistan, ca. 1950s-1970s
      • Ali Raza
    • Chapter 12. Radio’s Internationalism: A View from Modern Afghanistan
      • Mejgan Massoumi
    • Chapter 13
    • Chapter 13. South Asian Diasporic Connections and Afro-Asian Solidarities in the Life of Phyllis Naidoo
      • Annie Devenish
  • Afterword
    • Srinath Raghavan
  • Index

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