01749cam a2200349 a 45000010008000000030004000080050017000120080041000290100017000700150019000870160018001060200015001240200018001390240018001570350023001750350037001980350017002350400046002520430012002980500021003100820019003311000020003502450062003702600065004323000034004974900033005315040066005645200619006306510035012498300032012848560083013166053890OSt20161026164813.0060627s2007 nyua b 001 0 eng  a 2006020908 aGBA6751322bnb7 a0135422592Uk a1565847857 a97815658478593 a9781565847859 a(OCoLC)OCM70230642 a(OCoLC)70230642z(OCoLC)71239363 a(NNC)6053890 aDLCcDLCdBAKERdBTCTAdUKMdC#PdOrLoB-B ad------00aD 883b.P74 200700a909/.097242221 aPrashad, Vijay.14aThe Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World aNew York :bNew Press :bDistributed by W.W. Norton,cc2007. axix, 364 p. :bill. ;c25 cm.1 aA New Press people's history aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [283]-347) and index.1 a"The Darker Nations reconstructs the 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 narrative then goes on to recount the 1955 conference in Bandung, Indonesia, where twenty-nine African and Asian countries launched the Third World project. Prashad traces the hopes of this decades-long global movement, and delineates its limitations and ultimate downfall in the 1980s."--BOOK JACKET. 0aDeveloping countriesxHistory. 0aNew Press people's history.413Table of contents onlyuhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0616/2006020908.html