Echoes of Mutiny - Race, Surveillance & Indian Anticolonialism in North America(English, Paperback, Seema Sohi) | Zipri.in
Echoes of Mutiny  - Race, Surveillance & Indian Anticolonialism in North America(English, Paperback, Seema Sohi)

Echoes of Mutiny - Race, Surveillance & Indian Anticolonialism in North America(English, Paperback, Seema Sohi)

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How did thousands of Indians who migrated to the pacific coast of north America during the early twentieth century come to forge an anti-colonial movement that British authorities claimed nearly toppled their rule in India during the first world war? Seema Sohi traces how Indian labor migrants, students and intellectual activists who journeyed across the globe seeking to escape the exploitative and politically repressive policies of the British Raj, linked restrictive immigration policies and political repression in north America to colonial subjugation at home. In the process, they developed an international anti-colonial consciousness that boldly confronted the British and American empires. Hoping to become an important symbol for those battling against racial oppression and colonial subjugation across the world, Indian anti-colonialists also provoked a global inter-imperial collaboration between U.S. and British officials to repress anti-colonial revolt. They symbolized the hope of the world's racialized subjects and the fears of those who worried about the global disorder they could portend. Echoes of Mutiny provides an in-depth and transnational look at the deeply intertwined relationship between anti-Asian racism, Indian anti-colonialism and state anti-radicalism in early twentieth century U.S. and global history. Through extensive archival research, Sohi uncovers the dialectical relationship between the rise of Indian anti-colonialism and state repression in north America and demonstrates how Indian anti-colonialists served as catalysts for the implementation of restrictive U.S. immigration and anti-radical laws as well as the expansion of state power in early twentieth century India and America. Indian migrants came to understand their struggles against racial exclusion and political repression in north America as part of a broader movement against white supremacy and colonialism and articulated radical visions of anti-colonialism that called not only for the end of British rule in India but the forging of democracies across the world.