Agnes Smedley: The Life and Times of an American Radical by Janice R. Mackinnon and Stephen R. Mackinnon
Agnes Smedley: The Life and Times of an American Radical
AUTHORS- Janice R. Mackinnon and Stephen R. Mackinnon
HB ₹1795 |
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INFORMATION
- Authors : Janice R. Mackinnon and Stephen R. Mackinnon
- HB ISBN : 978-93-91144-31-9
- Year : 2022
- Extent: 244
- Discount available on checkout
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
Agnes Smedley’s (1894–1950) career as an activist journalist began in the 1910s and 1920s, with a commitment to the Indian Independence movement. Her anti-imperialism was based on the Jeffersonian tradition of the American Revolution. In New York, she was close to the Lion of the Punjab, Lala Lajpat Rai, writing for his publications until his death. In California, she was involved with the Sikh-led Ghadar party of insurrectionists. Her complicated relationship with the European movement leader Virendranath Chattopadhyaya in Berlin in the 1920s is better known. Smedley left Europe for China in 1929 in an effort to reach India through the backdoor. Once in China, she was struck by the poverty and oppression of ordinary people. Her new cause, in addition to anti-imperialism, became the Chinese peasant. For the next two decades she documented their plight in countless publications (including in the Indian press). Herself the product of rural poverty, she identified like few Westerners did with the plight of peasants, Chinese or Indian, and wrote biographies of Chinese peasant leaders such as Zhu De.
Today, inside and outside of Asia, Smedley is recognized as a feminist icon and one of the most important chroniclers of the Chinese Revolution. Her story is told here for the first time in an Indian edition, including her deep involvement with the Indian independence movement much before Gandhi appeared on the scene.
The Authors
Stephen R. MacKinnon is Emeritus Professor of History and former Director of the Center for Asian Studies at Arizona State University.
Janice R. MacKinnon (1943–99) was a poet and businesswoman who sold antique Chinese furniture. In 1977–78, and again in 1979–81 with two small children, they researched and conducted interviews in China and India for this book. A collection of Agnes Smedley’s articles edited by the MacKinnons entitled Portraits of Chinese Women in Revolution (1976) is still in print and widely translated.
‘The authors skillfully blend a thorough grasp of the first half of the century with a sensitive use of psycho-biographical technique.’
—GADDIS SMITH (YALE), Foreign Affairs
‘A first-rate biography – rich in detail, lucid in expression and judicious in interpretation.’
—JOHN PATRICK DIGGINS, New York Times Book Review
‘[A] fascinating biography… Smedley remains one of the extraordinary women of the century.’
—JONATHAN MIRSKY, London Independent