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Divide And Quit by Penderel Moon

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1Divide And Quit

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Book Source: Digital Library of India Item 2015.148789 dc.contributor.author: Moon, Penderel dc.date.accessioned: 2015-07-06T13:46:03Z dc.date.available: 2015-07-06T13:46:03Z dc.date.digitalpublicationdate: 2013-03-27 dc.identifier.barcode: 99999990342498 dc.identifier.origpath: /data15/upload/0033/328 dc.identifier.copyno: 1 dc.identifier.uri: http://www.new.dli.ernet.in/handle/2015/148789 dc.description.scanningcentre: North Eastern States Libraries dc.description.main: 1 dc.description.tagged: 0 dc.description.totalpages: 299 dc.format.mimetype: application/pdf dc.language.iso: English dc.publisher.digitalrepublisher: Digital Library Of India dc.publisher: Chatto And Windus, London dc.rights: In Public Domain dc.source.library: Birchandra State Central Library, Tripura dc.subject.classification: History dc.subject.keywords: Genesis Of Pakistan dc.subject.keywords: Cabinet Mission dc.subject.keywords: Mountbatten Plan dc.subject.keywords: Bahawalpur State dc.subject.keywords: Punjab And Pakistan dc.title: Divide And Quit

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2Divide And Quit

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302 p. 23 cm

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3Divide And Quit

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302 p. 23 cm

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4Divide And Quit

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This book was copied from the amazing and wonderful PAHAR: Mountains of Central Asia Digital Dataset, a labor of love by two dedicated and talented historians. We encourage you to visit them, and subscribe to their list for updates on new books as they are uploaded.

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5Divide And Quit

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302 pages 23 cm

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The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 685.43 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 141 times, the file-s went public at Sat Feb 15 2020.

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699999990342498 Divide And Quit

Penderel Moon on the Partition and its aftermath ....

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1Divide and quit

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“Divide and quit” Metadata:

  • Title: Divide and quit
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: Median: 302
  • Publisher: ➤  Chatto and Windus - Oxford University Press - Chatto & Windus - Brand: Oxford University Press, USA - University of California Press
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: ➤  Berkeley - Oxford - London - Delhi

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  • First Year Published: 1961
  • Is Full Text Available: Yes
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: Borrowable

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2Divide and Quit

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“Divide and Quit” Metadata:

  • Title: Divide and Quit
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  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: Median: 310
  • Publisher: University of california press
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  • First Year Published: 1962
  • Is Full Text Available: Yes
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: Borrowable

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1Wongo And The Wise Old Crow

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Stories of an Indian boy and his friends told by a children’s author of yesteryear, published 1923. - Summary by david wales

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  • Format: Audio
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  • Total Time: 03:03:56

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2Imperialism and World Politics, Part 1 of 4

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Moon’s <i>Imperialism and World Politics</i> is perhaps the best-known work of the Columbia University professor and political scientist; It was published in 1926 and did not go out-of-print until after 1940. “What convenient volume,” he asks, exists as a “general account of the greater imperialism of our own times?” A question which was suitably answered by the publication of this sweeping survey of the field. Written in what would prove to be the gathering twilight of European imperialism, and with the inclination towards reflection that only the aftermath of a great catastrophe like the First World War can evoke, this work spans the globe and follows behind Great Britain, France, Belgium, Italy, Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States as they shaped world politics to their own ends—imposing their will on states, economies and peoples. Moon writes of his work that, “It can make no claim to finality.” Indeed, this is surely not the last word on the subject. Not in the past. Not even, truly, in the present. And yet, Moon’s work does possess a greater degree of finality than he at the time, perhaps, might have credited. THIS IS PART ONE OF FOUR. In this part, Moon casts a bright light upon the driving forces, the economics and the vested interests. He unpicks the propaganda, the rationalizations, and the theories. The slide from the Anti-Imperialism, which still held sway in the 1860s, to the Scramble for Africa as free trade faltered, tariff walls were erected, and the economic rationale shifted. He also follows the Belgians into the Congo, and casts an eye over West Africa where—over the course of five decades—the region has been transformed by Great Britain, France and Germany in pursuit of resources and cash crops. Rubber and Cocoa. Palm Oil and Tropical Wood. Gold and Diamonds. At the other end of the supply chain, the new colonialism created captive markets within which to dump excess manufactured goods which the tariff-constrained industrial economies of Europe could not absorb domestically. Rivers and railways were the spigots with which to tap the bounty of Africa’s interior, but it took African labour to harvest it first. Accordingly when George Taubman Goldie secured Nigeria for the British, he secured the crown jewel of West Africa. Powerful native polities such as the Sokoto Caliphate and the Kingdom of Dahomey would be unmade, crumbling before the technological and industrialized might of European interlopers. Expanding their presence on the continent with the justification of spreading Civilization and Progress, and extirpating the slave trade, Belgium and France proceeded to brutally compel native populations to work, at gun point, without renumeration, to death. Nor were they alone in committing genocides, in suppressing native unrest. Meanwhile in Liberia, 1925 marks the arrival of business titan Harvey Firestone, whose company has played a leading role in Liberia ever since. The country would be an aberration. Like a lonely sea stack, the tide of European imperialism would wash around it for it would be shielded by its connection with the United States.

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  • Language: English
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  • Format: Audio
  • Number of Sections: 9
  • Total Time: 05:27:05

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3Imperialism and World Politics, Part 2 of 4

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Moon’s Iᴍᴘᴇʀɪᴀʟɪsᴍ ᴀɴᴅ Wᴏʀʟᴅ Pᴏʟɪᴛɪᴄs is perhaps the best-known work of the Columbia University professor and political scientist; It was published in 1926 and did not go out-of-print until at least 1940. “What convenient volume,” he asks, exists as a “general account of the greater imperialism of our own times?” A question which was suitably answered by the publication of this sweeping survey of the field. Written in what would prove to be the gathering twilight of European imperialism, and with the inclination towards reflection that only the aftermath of a great catastrophe like the First World War can evoke, this work spans the globe and follows behind Great Britain, France, Belgium, Italy, Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States as they shaped world politics to their own ends—imposing their will on states, economies and peoples. Moon writes of his work that, “It can make no claim to finality.” Indeed, this is surely not the last word on the subject. Not in the past. Not even, truly, in the present. And yet, Moon’s work does possess a greater degree of finality then he at the time, perhaps, might have credited. THIS IS PART TWO OF FOUR. In this part, Moon starts by briefly covering the Anglo-German contention over East Africa, French designs on the island of Madagascar and Italy’s foray into the Horn of Africa to establish the colony of ‘Somaliland’. His telling then reaches “a natural sequel… to events which have unfolded themselves in preceding chapters.” The jealous contest over Abyssinia and Sudan. For “nowhere did visions of empire struggle for mastery with a greater intensity of conflict or a more colourful wealth of spectacular incident.” As Moon tellingly remarks, “Imperialism is rarely active against a formidable foe.” Britain conquered an Egypt riven by civil war in 1882—just in time to be sucked into the budding jihad in Sudan waged in defence of the Arab slave trade and in rejection of khedival rule. The British response to the Mahdists went from feckless to quite feeble. Unwilling to act themselves after a string of embarrassing disasters, Britain sought simply – for a decade-and-a-half – to play Italian ambitions off against French designs. This precipitated the dramatic events of the First Italo-Abyssinian War, and French largess in training and munitions conferred upon Menelik’s forces helped to tip the scales—toward a decisive Italian defeat. Moon next profiles Cecil Rhodes and takes us into South Africa. Next into the violence and cunning which abided in Europe’s near abroad, the “smiling and temperate coastlands” of North Africa, where France, Spain, Italy, Germany and Britain squabble over pounds of Ottoman, Algerian and Moroccan flesh. Finally, this part concludes with a survey of Near Eastern ‘Questions’ and, also, an exploration of the anxiety that Russia’s creeping southward expansion exercised on the British halls of power, and its effects on India’s periphery. - Summary by Alister

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  • Title: ➤  Imperialism and World Politics, Part 2 of 4
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  • Language: English
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  • Format: Audio
  • Number of Sections: 11
  • Total Time: 06:40:37

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4Imperialism and World Politics, Part 3 of 4

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Moon’s Iᴍᴘᴇʀɪᴀʟɪsᴍ ᴀɴᴅ Wᴏʀʟᴅ Pᴏʟɪᴛɪᴄs is perhaps the best-known work of the Columbia University professor and political scientist; It was published in 1926 and did not go out-of-print until at least 1940. “What convenient volume,” he asks, exists as a “general account of the greater imperialism of our own times?” A question which was suitably answered by the publication of this sweeping survey of the field. Written in what would prove to be the gathering twilight of European imperialism, and with the inclination towards reflection that only the aftermath of a great catastrophe like the First World War can evoke, this work spans the globe and follows behind Great Britain, France, Belgium, Italy, Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States as they shaped world politics to their own ends—imposing their will on states, economies and peoples. Moon writes of his work that, “It can make no claim to finality.” Indeed, this is surely not the last word on the subject. Not in the past. Not even, truly, in the present. And yet, Moon’s work does possess a greater degree of finality then he at the time, perhaps, might have credited. THIS IS PART THREE OF FOUR. In this part, Moon rests first on the recent history of British India, and the rise of nationalism. In the words of Moon, “India occupies a most important place in the British Empire, and in world politics,” while also being “the crucial internal problem” of the empire. In the face of a such a large nationalist movement, only “such a miracle as was worked in South Africa, the transformation of Nationalists into Imperialists, could easily solve this problem.” The sub-continent being so preponderant within the Empire, not unlike a tiger bestridden by a pug, mollifying Indian sentiment was a square which was hard to circle. Long engrained racism made such concessions very difficult at the time, and ultimately precluded Great Britain from even trying. If ever there was a prospect, a second world war hollowing out British sinew and resolve would torpedo any chance of holding onto the sub-continent. He also surveys Indochina—today Mainland Southeast Asia—where colonies would be carved out by France and Britain in the Nineteenth Century and Siam—modern day Thailand—would endure as the only country in Southeast Asia to evade colonization due to its utility as a buffer state. Of particular interest, Moon takes the opportunity to compare and contrast the human and economic development in Siam with neighbouring colonial domains. Of China, Moon says “surrounded by vassals and tributaries, China was truly a giant, a giant grown drowsy in centuries of unquestioned supremacy,” and that, “Europe woke the giant.” He quotes U.S. secretary of state John Hay as having said, “Whoever understands that mighty empire . . . has a key to world politics for the next five centuries.” The first rousing startlement—into an unfolding waking nightmare—would be the First Opium War (1839 – 1842) where her fleet would be roughly handled by the East India Company’s ironclad steamship, the Nemesis. Great Britain would pry treaty ports from China, stripping away further her control over her own trade, and compel her to cede an unremarkable island called Hongkong. Chinese history for the following Century of Humiliation would prove to be turbulent. If Japan’s opening to world, at the instigation of Perry, was in any way less of a systemic shock it was only because Japan did not prolong her own agony, but embarked on a crash Westernization with reckless abandon, without reservation. For the Japanese both perceived their own danger more acutely and coveted the potency of Western industrialized power with the full awareness of how such disruptive capabilities might, in their own hands, be just as capable of upending the status quo. In the span of four decades, Japan had joined the ranks of the colonial powers herself—establishing colonies in Korea and China. To embark and succeed in so profound a restructuring of government and economy at such a pace remains as impressive a feat of unity and resolve today as it was to the natives of the Nineteenth Century. Given the highly racialized nature of the reaction among many in the United States to Japan’s rise, clearly the country’s success fostered – or activated – insecurities in the psyche of white America, though the capacity gap between the two powers remained almost as wide as the Pacific Ocean that separated them. Japan would go on to dominate China in the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894–5. In the peace treaty signed in Shimonoseki, Japan would seize the territory of Formosa (Taiwan) and force China to surrender her suzerainty of Korea. She also attempted to seize the Liaodong Peninsula—a highly strategic finger of land jutting from southern Manchuria at the heart of the Yellow Sea—but France and Germany leagued together with Russia to thwart this mainland acquisition with threatening diplomacy. This was not a chivalrous act. With the withdrawal of Japanese forces, Russian soldiers poured in and the Chinese government was then pressured into the Pavlov Agreement of 1898, leasing the Liaodong Peninsula to Russia. But Russia’s new naval base at Port Arthur would not serve it any better than the bitter enmity it earned from Japan—their harvest was the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5 and Port Arthur would fall many months before the final coup de grâce of Tsushima was landed. While Russia and Japan squabbled over the choicest cut, the rest of China was no less a stomping ground for all who could afford the cost of entry. The Dowager Empress sought, at first upon seizing power, to forestall reforms, to resist all influence as she was able. The ‘Boxer Rebellion’ of 1900 was a violent, nationalist, anti-foreign popular reaction – unofficially sanctioned – which prompted intervention from a coalition of all the Great Powers; Great Britain, France, Russia, the United States and Germany. Italy also contributed; It already had a pair of cruisers on station, attempting to extort a concession of their own—China had ignored them—and it sent additional forces. Austria–Hungary’s contingent arrived too late to see action, so only the crew of the cruiser already on station were engaged in hostilities. But no power contributed a greater strength than Japan, whose committed warships and soldiers almost totaled Russia and Great Britain’s combined strength. Bitter as she was over European meddling with the fruits of her last foray into China, the scent of opportunity was too sweet. As with every convulsion, China emerged the worse for it. The Dowager Empress ultimately declared war in June of 1900 on the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Austria–Hungary, Belgium and the Netherlands. It would have been a much more impressive declaration if most of China hadn’t simply ignored her edict. Weighty reparations were imposed. Territory was ceded, including the Russian seizure of the rest of Manchuria. Moon next moves on to cover developments in Maritime Southeast Asia and Oceania. This includes a brief overview of the Dutch East Indies with an emphasis on economics, education and governance. The next subsection covers British possessions in the region being Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, etc. Germany’s possessions in the region were divided up after World War One, with Japan securing a mandate over the Marshall Islands, the Palau Islands, the Northern Marianas (as distinct from Guam) and the Caroline Islands (today largely part of Micronesia)—much to the pique of the United States. After a brief survey of the French in New Caledonia and Tahiti, etc., Moon turns to the United States’ conquest of the Philippines and Guam in the Spanish-American War of 1898—much to the pique of Japan and of Germany. This along with the annexation of Hawaii, and the governance of these territories. The final topic upon which this third instalment rests is the Monroe Doctrine and the United States’ policy toward and financial penetration of Latin America. (Summary by Alister)

“Imperialism and World Politics, Part 3 of 4” Metadata:

  • Title: ➤  Imperialism and World Politics, Part 3 of 4
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  • Language: English
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  • Format: Audio
  • Number of Sections: 10
  • Total Time: 06:37:42

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5Imperialism and World Politics, Part 4 of 4

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Moon’s Iᴍᴘᴇʀɪᴀʟɪsᴍ ᴀɴᴅ Wᴏʀʟᴅ Pᴏʟɪᴛɪᴄs is perhaps the best-known work of the Columbia University professor and political scientist; It was published in 1926 and did not go out-of-print until at least 1940. “What convenient volume,” he asks, exists as a “general account of the greater imperialism of our own times?” A question which was suitably answered by the publication of this sweeping survey of the field. Written in what would prove to be the gathering twilight of European imperialism, and with the inclination towards reflection that only the aftermath of a great catastrophe like the First World War can evoke, this work spans the globe and follows behind Great Britain, France, Belgium, Italy, Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States as they shaped world politics to their own ends—imposing their will on states, economies and peoples. Moon writes of his work that, “It can make no claim to finality.” Indeed, this is surely not the last word on the subject. Not in the past. Not even, truly, in the present. And yet, Moon’s work does possess a greater degree of finality then he at the time, perhaps, might have credited. THIS IS PART FOUR OF FOUR. In the final part, Moon examines the role and viability of small nations within Imperialist world politics as well as trans-Atlantic relations, covers the League of Nations, examines the mandate system including in Syria and Palestine and considers the value of the court of public opinion. It also draws together a set of conclusions which will not be summarized here. - Summary by Alister

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  • Title: ➤  Imperialism and World Politics, Part 4 of 4
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