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The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World (New Press People's History) Paperback – Illustrated, April 29, 2008

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 151 ratings

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Here, from a brilliant young writer, is a paradigm-shifting history of both a utopian concept and global movement―the idea of the Third World. The Darker Nations traces the intellectual origins and the political history of the twentieth century attempt to knit together the world's impoverished countries in opposition to the United States and Soviet spheres of influence in the decades following World War II.

Spanning every continent of the global South, Vijay Prashad's fascinating narrative takes us from the birth of postcolonial nations after World War II to the downfall and corruption of nationalist regimes. A breakthrough book of cutting-edge scholarship, it includes vivid portraits of Third World giants like India's Nehru, Egypt's Nasser, and Indonesia's Sukarno―as well as scores of extraordinary but now-forgotten intellectuals, artists, and freedom fighters.
The Darker Nations restores to memory the vibrant though flawed idea of the Third World, whose demise, Prashad ultimately argues, has produced a much impoverished international political arena.

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
151 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2012
This text is one of the more difficult reads I have experienced this year. My timing was wrong for meeting the necessary concentration to absorb the content. I immediately reread it in the same head space. Fortunately I discussed the text while I reread his work. This is one of the most important texts on the current airwaves concerning the third world project. I am glad to have consumed this book. I will reread this text again. American financial Ingenuity and competition practiced upon the third world nations comes to light clearly, if one takes the time to really consume this author's work. Vijay Prashad is poking his thoughts on the web with this text and everyone who knows anything seems to consume and write deep understanding in corroboration for his concepts of reality. I will hold on to this text until I die.
ChangeItOrDrownIt
B 36 Ears
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2011
I actually bought it to help study for my final but it took forever to get to me because of winds shutting down airlines, but I still enjoyed the book. It was huge compared to other college texts and was an easy read. When I saw Howard Zenn as the editor I knew it was going to be good because the books he is involved with are generally much more interesting than normal history texts. This gives a great account of the sie of history people don't normally hear of and even if it isn't for school i would recommend it to history enthusiasts.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2017
Prashad's writing style is super enjoyable to read while being very poignant. His content for this book is detailed and well researched, and is presented in an even handed way; he brings an ethical rigour to understanding the positive and negative which has come out of the legacy of the Third World project. I highly recommend this book!!
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2018
Great book. Maybe a Year 2 Undergrad book for political science majors. The title and cover illustration are extremely misleading and this is not some paean to leftist, revolutionary thought or philosophy. This is basically a book about how the developing world came to be.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2015
I have spent years in the author's country and quite a lot of time in the Arab world (Syria, Libya) and am happy to have the opportunity to read such an excellent work on the life of "darker nations", who accepted me as their friend.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2012
It's a book Amazon, I'm reading it. What else do you want? It's really long & I'm only on the Buenos Aires chapter because it's on economics which I find boring. Stop emailing me, please.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2008
This book is an ambitious effort to chart the fortunes of the political project of unifying the postcolonial world into 'the third world'. It is not, however, a 'people's' history, either in the senses of charting the demographic transformations of ordinary people (literacy, urbanization, etc) or anthropologically describing how they understood the dramatic events (revolutions, counterrevolutions, development experiments, etc) unfolding. It is almost exclusively concerned with the major leaders and some of the intellectuals and artists who shaped the consciousness of the period. Indeed, even if it was not titled 'people's history', I think it could be faulted by being a little vague about 'the people'.

In any case, the book is basically divided into three parts. The first section, 'Quest', considers some themes (economics, nationalism, gender, etc) through the optic of major conferences. The second, 'pitfalls', highlights places that epitomize themes like military coups and socialism from above. The third section, 'Assassinations' describes the demise of the third world as a subject as a result of neoliberalism, the IMF, the rise of East Asia, and religious fundamentalism. In all sections, Prashad tends to move between the focus of the chapter and historical geographical events that are far afield and occur before and after the moment in question. The effect can be a little vertiginous. Certainly he deserves credit for attempting such an expansive work, and his knowledge about the time period appears to be vast.

However, I found his organization a little too tidy, and his political perspective restricted by his focus on state leaders. Particularly since he regards the UN as something of an instrument for third world advancement (an interesting contrast with Perry Anderson, who claims its just a front for the US), why does he disregard the international conferences held under its auspices in the last fifteen years regarding the environment, women, and racism? Although attended by people from countries in the North as well as the South, at these forums it is probably fair to say that Southern perspectives tended to prevail and throw the North on the defensive. And why is not a word breathed about the World Social Forum? Is it because he regards NGOs (also almost completely absent from his book) as instruments of Northern domination, or because he regards social movements as insignificant compared to states? The absence of any discussion of these issues seems almost sectarian, as does his fairly crude analysis of religion (focused on Saudi-backed Wahhabi Islam--the Iranian revolution is practically unmentioned). Finally, he doesn't seem to have noticed, as have some other writers, that a number of third world states have begun to recover from neoliberalism and seem to be gradually reasserting themselves.
73 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2019
PRIMO FAST FIVE STAR PERFECTION! RECOMMENDED!

Top reviews from other countries

Xerxes
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!
Reviewed in Canada on June 20, 2014
As a young leftist it's great to read something that re-orients our gaze towards the international political system. Prashad does a great job of tracking the rise of 'The Third World' both in theory and action; and tracks it to its eventual demise.

A particularly useful read for those who still believe in 'foreign aid' and 'international development' and other such liberal notions.
abasu1979
5.0 out of 5 stars Triumph and Tragedy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 15, 2008
The epic tale of the rise and fall of the Third World project - the first (and so far only) political programme encompassing the majority of mankind, has finally been told - and told well. It is a saga of monumental proportion, involving the hopes, frustrations, victories and calamities of billions of people living in the poorer regions of the globe. Yet, at its heart, it is the poignant biography of the birth, struggle and murder of an idealistic aspiration for a better world.

The roots of the Third World project can be traced back to radical intellectuals and anti-colonial activists who operated in both the colonies as well as the imperial homelands. It was the common struggle against European imperialism that brought these men together and led them to formulate shared goals and interests. The project came of age when the colonial empires were brought down by popular resistance and political changes, and the newly independent states sought to carve a new path for themselves, one that avoided both American and Soviet blocs.

It is to his credit that Professor Prashad demonstrates that the Third World project - as exemplified by the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) was about more than just neutrality in the Cold War. It entailed a particular set of political principles - namely national sovereignty, non-violence, global social justice and international cooperation. From Bandung to Bolivia, these ideas had wide resonance, even among the established elites in the Third World. However, putting these principles into practice was another matter, although the Third World project did have its successes, (notably in accelerating decolonization and influencing Soviet foreign policy) as the first part of the book reveals.

The demise of the Third World project had internal and external causes: the former are dealt with in the second part of the book, the latter in the third. The main internal cause of the project's collapse was the failure to reform society: as a result, the ruling classes in the Third World, once they attained a certain degree of power and wealth, were able to jettison the developmental state in favour of neoliberalism, (which corresponded with a shift in their ideological sympathies from nationalism to globalism). The key external cause was the inability of the Third World to break its economic dependence on the developed countries, which, in the wake of the debt crises, made it increasingly difficulty for it to propose or promote an independent political agenda. Of course, the author also considers many of the subsidiary causes for the Third World's failures.

The overall layout of the book is roughly chronological, but the individual chapters combine thematic and geographical approaches. Thus, each chapter considers one particular part of the Third World, (be it Havana, Arusha or Singapore), provides its historical background, and then employs it to demonstrate a theme or an event common to many developing countries. This rather unconventional style of writing, which builds from the local and the particular, to the global and the general, provides the reader with a deeper as well as a wider understanding of the history and politics of the Third World.

Though the Third World project had a number of triumphs, it ultimately ended in tragedy, as old ideas perished at the hands of new realities. One such reality was the replacement of a political nationalism based on solidarity and sympathy, with a cultural nationalism founded on hatred and xenophobia. Professor Prashad describes how and why this shift took place - and how masses once gripped by the hopeful idealism of secular and socialist movements fell prey to the paranoid politics of religious fundamentalists. As we watch society after society succumb to this madness, 'The Darker Nations' enables us to realize just how much the failure of the Third World project has cost us.
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Eye opening
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 2, 2021
Great insight to a largely forgotten part of Cold War history.
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 7, 2016
Excellent analysis, essential reading for understanding the present state of the world, including the rise of religious nationalism and fundamentalist Islam.