This open access book explores the ways in which the global south reimagined the future world order at the end of the Second World War, and the cultural and intellectual breakthroughs that these new narratives created. The end of the Second World War and the eclipse of empires brought a wave of efforts to reimagine the future world order. When nation states emerging from colonial rule met at Bandung to chart alternative destinies and challenge global inequalities, they hoped to create a less hierarchical, more pluralistic and more distributive world. This volume considers the alternative visions put forth by the third world at the close of WWII to recover their world-changing aspirations as well as its cultural and intellectual breakthroughs.
Demonstrating how the invention of the third world sought to create new institutions of solidarity, new expressions and alternative narratives to the imperial ones that they had inherited, this book reveals how writers, artists, musicians and photographers created networks to circulate and exchange these ideas. Exploring these ideas put forth from various regions of the global south, the chapters trace their search for new meanings of freedom, self-determination and the promise of development. Out of this moment came efforts in the south to create new histories of global relations, icons and genres, and placed the promises of decolonization and struggles for social and racial justice at the centre of global history.
Showing how efforts to remake the world intersected with and altered the trajectories of the global Cold War, Inventing the Third World discusses how this conflict existed outside of the traditional east-west framework and offers an insight into a radically different 'global cultural cold war'. It shows that the Cold War era was marked by attempts to bring about a different world order that would achieve global racial, social justice and a different kind of peace.
Author(s): Gyan Prakash, Jeremy Adelman (eds.)
Series: Histories of Internationalism
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 297
City: New York
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Figures
Preface
Foreword: On the Threshold of the Third World
Introduction: Imagining the Third World: Genealogies of Alternative Global Histories
Chapter 1: The Third World before Afro-Asia
Chapter 2: From Peace to National Liberation: Mexico and the Tricontinental
Chapter 3: A Voice for the Yugoslavs in Latin America: Oscar Waiss and the Yugoslav-Chilean Connection
Chapter 4: The End of Ideology and the Third World: The Congress for Cultural Freedom’s 1955 Milan Conference on the “Future of Freedom” and its Aftermath
Chapter 5: Latin American Network in Exile: A Communist Cultural Legacy for the Third World
Chapter 6: Radical Scholarship and Political Activism: Walter Rodney as Third World Intellectual and Historian of the Third World
Chapter 7: From London 1948 to Dakar 1966: Crises in Anticolonial Counterpublics
Chapter 8: Francis Newton Souza’s Black Paintings: Postwar Transactions in Color
Chapter 9: Listening to the Cold War in Bombay
Chapter 10: Imagining a Progressive World: Soviet Visual Culture in Postcolonial India
Chapter 11: The Battle of Conferences: Cultural Decolonization and Global Cold War
Chapter 12: The Death of the Third World Revisited: Curative Democracy and World-Making in Late 1970s India
Coda
Contributors
Index