Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945

Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945

by Tim Harper, Christopher Bayly
ISBN-10:
067402219X
ISBN-13:
9780674022195
Pub. Date:
04/30/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
067402219X
ISBN-13:
9780674022195
Pub. Date:
04/30/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945

Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945

by Tim Harper, Christopher Bayly

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Overview

In the early stages of the Second World War, the vast crescent of British-ruled territories stretching from India to Singapore appeared as a massive Allied asset. It provided scores of soldiers and great quantities of raw materials and helped present a seemingly impregnable global defense against the Axis. Yet, within a few weeks in 1941-42, a Japanese invasion had destroyed all this, sweeping suddenly and decisively through south and southeast Asia to the Indian frontier, and provoking the extraordinary revolutionary struggles which would mark the beginning of the end of British dominion in the East and the rise of today's Asian world.

More than a military history, this gripping account of groundbreaking battles and guerrilla campaigns creates a panoramic view of British Asia as it was ravaged by warfare, nationalist insurgency, disease, and famine. It breathes life into the armies of soldiers, civilians, laborers, businessmen, comfort women, doctors, and nurses who confronted the daily brutalities of a combat zone which extended from metropolitan cities to remote jungles, from tropical plantations to the Himalayas. Drawing upon a vast range of Indian, Burmese, Chinese, and Malay as well as British, American, and Japanese voices, the authors make vivid one of the central dramas of the twentieth century: the birth of modern south and southeast Asia and the death of British rule.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674022195
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/30/2006
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 616
Product dimensions: 5.75(w) x 8.88(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Christopher Bayly was Vere Harmsworth Professor, Emeritus, at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of St Catharine’s College.

Tim Harper is Professor of the History of Southeast Asia and Director of the Centre for History and Economics at the University of Cambridge. His books include The End of Empire and the Making of Malaya and, with Christopher Bayly, Forgotten Armies and Forgotten Wars (both from Harvard).

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Maps

Some Key Characters

Preface: The Many 'Forgotten Armies'

Prologue, Part I: Escaping Colonialism

Japan's Asian vision and the coming of war

Aung San's Far Eastern odyssey

'Signor Mazzotta' flees to Berlin

Mr Tan Kah Kee visits Mao

Prologue, Part II: Journeys through Empire

The great crescent

A Malayan pastorale

The 'new world' of Singapore

Malaise

1. 1941: Last of the Indian and Burmese Days

India on the brink

Indian politics as usual?

Burma unready

The world of the hills and the 'tribes'

Dorman-Smith reaches his 'backwater'

Burmese and others

Endgame: the governor and the politicians

2. 1942: A Very British Disaster

The fortress that never was

The arrow leaves the bow

The battle of Malaya

'The modern Pompeiians'

Flotsam and jetsam

3. 1942: Debacle in Burma

The road to Rangoon

From scorched earth to green hell

Burma's false dawn

Death of the innocents

Would India hold?

Total defence in the hills: the Lushai levies

The Nagas, the Kachins and the anthropologists

The monsoon of 1942: an unnoticed turning point

4. 1942: The Abyss and the Way Back

The rape of Malaya

The 'New Malai'

Desperate journeys: Burma in late 1942

India ablaze

The forgotten armies mobilize

5. 1943: Valleys of the Shadow of Death

Uneasy allies

Another fiasco in Arakan

India in the doldrums

The great starvation

The slow fight back begins

6. 1943: Personal Wars

Ba Maw's apotheosis

The 'Spirit of Asia' and the Malay nation

The second coming of the Indian National Army

Life in the time of tapioca

'Life without salt'

War by proxy

High councils: Tokyo, Cairo and Tehran

7. 1944: The Pivot of the Fighting

Japan's final throw

India on the offensive

Battle commences: Imphal and Kohima

The politics of war

Japan's forgotten army

8. 1944: The Nemesis of Greater East Asia

Heroism and murder in the hills

The crumbling of 'Free Burma'

Roads to the death railway

Silent armies

The peninsular war

New balls at Wimbledon

9. 1945: Freedoms Won and Lost

India mobilized

Ba Maw's last stand

Aung San's revolt

Rangoon falls again

The fading light of the new Asia

10. August 1945: An End and a Beginning

Final journeys down the crescent

Forgotten armies, forgotten wars

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Roger Spiller

A work of enormous scope, scholarly depth and sophistication, excellently written, Forgotten Armies paints a memorable portrait of how the old Imperial British Crescent from Calcutta to Singapore was swept away by the storms of war and social upheaval. Forgotten Armies now takes its rightful place as the definitive history of the Second World War in Southeast Asia.
Roger Spiller, George C. Marshall Professor of Military History, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College

Ronald Spector

Forgotten Armies is an original and comprehensive account of one of the least understood aspects of the War with Japan. The book will be a worthy successor and complement to Christopher Thorne's classic Allies of a Kind.
Ronald Spector, author of Eagle Against the Sun: The American War with Japan

Akira Iriye

This is a masterful account of the fate of British Asia during the Second World War. Far more than military or political history, the book presents a fascinating account of how individual lives and social relations changed from the heyday of the British raj to the rise and fall of Japan's Asian empire...The principal players are Britons, Japanese, Indians, Burmese, Malays, Chinese, Koreans, and other ethnic groups who established sharp social and racial distinctions among themselves and developed their own "forgotten armies." In the final analysis, as the authors show, it was the ordinary people of Asia who were emerging, by war's end, as the new masters of their own destinies. By focusing sharply on the "periphery," Bayly and Harper make a major contribution to the study of imperialism.
Akira Iriye, Charles Warren Professor of American History, Harvard University

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