Cover image for The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia : Visions of World Order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Thought.
The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia : Visions of World Order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Thought.
Title:
The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia : Visions of World Order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Thought.
Author:
Aydin, Cemil.
ISBN:
9780231510684
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (251 pages)
Series:
Columbia Studies in International and Global History
Contents:
Cover -- Half title -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Universal West: Europe Beyond Its Christian and White Race Identity (1840-1882) -- The Great Rupture: Ottoman Imagination of a European Model -- Ottoman Westernism and the European International Society -- A Non-Christian Europe? -- The West in Early Japanese Reformist Thought -- The Modern Genesis of Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Ideas -- Conclusion -- 3. The Two Faces of the West: Imperialism Versus Enlightenment (1882-1905) -- The Muslim World as an Inferior Semitic Race: Ernest Renan and His Muslim Critics -- Yellow Versus White Peril? Pan-Asian Critiques and Conceptions of World Order -- Crescent Versus Cross? Pan-Islamic Reflections on the "Clash of Civilizations" Thesis -- Conclusion -- 4. The Global Moment of the Russo-Japanese War: The Awakening of the East/Equality with the West (1905-1912) -- An Alternative to the West? Asian Observations on the Japanese Model -- Defining an Anti-Western Internationalism: Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Visions of Solidarity -- Japanese Pan-Asianism After the Russo-Japanese War -- Conclusion -- 5. The Impact of WWI on Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asianist Visions of World Order -- Pan-Islamism and the Ottoman State -- The Realist Pan-Islamism of Celal Nuri and İsmail Naci Pelister -- Pan-Islamic Mobilization during WWI -- The Transformation of Pan-Asianism During WWI: Ôkawa Shûmei, Indian Nationalists, and Asiaphile European Romantics -- Asia as a Site of National Liberation -- Asia as the Hope of Humanity -- Conclusion -- 6. The Triumph of Nationalism? The Ebbing of Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Visions of World Order During the 1920s -- The Wilsonian Moment and Pan-Islamism -- The Wilsonian Moment and Pan-Asianism -- Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asianist Perceptions of Socialist Internationalism.

"Clash of Civilizations" in the Age of Nationalism -- The Weakness of Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asianist Political Projects During the 1920s -- Conclusion -- 7. The Revival of a Pan-Asianist Vision of World Order in Japan (1931-1945) -- Explaining Japan's Official "Return to Asia" -- Withdrawal from the League of Nations as a Turning Point -- Asianist Journals and Organizations -- Asianist Ideology of the 1930s -- Wartime Asian Internationalism and Its Postwar Legacy -- Conclusion -- 8. Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
In this rich intellectual history, Cemil Aydin challenges the notion that anti-Westernism in the Muslim world is a political and religious reaction to the liberal and democratic values of the West. Nor is anti-Westernism a natural response to Western imperialism. Instead, by focusing on the agency and achievements of non-Western intellectuals, Aydin demonstrates that modern anti-Western discourse grew out of the legitimacy crisis of a single, Eurocentric global polity in the age of high imperialism. Aydin compares Ottoman Pan-Islamic and Japanese Pan-Asian visions of world order from the middle of the nineteenth century to the end of World War II. He looks at when the idea of a universal "West" first took root in the minds of Asian intellectuals and reformers and how it became essential in criticizing the West for violating its own "standards of civilization." Aydin also illustrates why these anti-Western visions contributed to the decolonization process and considers their influence on the international relations of both the Ottoman and Japanese Empires during WWI and WWII. The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia offers a rare, global perspective on how religious tradition and the experience of European colonialism interacted with Muslim and non-Muslim discontent with globalization, the international order, and modernization. Aydin's approach reveals the epistemological limitations of Orientalist knowledge categories, especially the idea of Eastern and Western civilizations, and the way in which these limitations have shaped not only the contradictions and political complicities of anti-Western discourses but also contemporary interpretations of anti-Western trends. In moving beyond essentialist readings of this history, Aydin provides a fresh understanding of the history of contemporary anti-Americanism as well as the ongoing struggle to

establish a legitimate and inclusive international society.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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