An alternative Account of the Cold War from the point of the view of the world's poor�"The first comprehensive
political history of the third world as concept and as project" Immanuel Wallerstein).
"The Third World today faces Europe like a colossal mass whose project should be to try to resolve the problems
to which Europe has not been able to find the answers."�Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (1961)
A landmark work from a brilliant young scholar, The Darker Nations chronicles the rise and fall of the Third World.
Its hardcover publication was hailed by renowned scholar Immanuel Wallerstein as "essential background for
rethinking history." Publishers Weekly recognized its relevance for global activists today, noting its "vital
assertion of an alternative future, grounded in an anti-imperialist vision."
Brilliantly tracing the hopes of this decades-long global movement, its limitations, and its ultimate downfall
in the 1980s, Prashad reconstructs the fascinating prehistory of the Third World, recalling the now-forgotten 1927
Brussels conclave of the League Against Imperialism�an international effort that brought Albert Einstein together
with Jawaharlal Nehru, Madame Sun Yat-Sen, and hundreds of other far-flung revolutionaries. The book also offers
a striking new analysis of the 1955 conference in Bandung, Indonesia, where twenty-nine African and Asian countries�and
Third World giants like India's Nehru, Egypt's Nasser, and Indonesia's Sukarno�launched the Third World project.
Elegiac, combative, revisionist, incisive�and recalling the vivid thoughts and words of scores of extraordinaryintellectuals,
artists, and freedom fighters�The Darker Nations is destined to become a classic.