Gandhi's Interpreter: A Life of Horace Alexander
By (Author) Geoffrey Carnall
Foreword by Philippa Gregory
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
17th August 2010
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Asian history
Biography: historical, political and military
327.172092
Hardback
336
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
607g
Horace Alexander was an English Quaker who played a significant part in relations between Indian nationalist leaders and the British Government in the years before the transfer of power in 1947. He came to know Gandhi well, and was trusted by him as an intermediary. At the same time he enjoyed the confidence of the British Conservative ministers R.A.Butler and Leo Amery, as well as, on the Labour side, Sir Stafford Cripps and Lord Pethick Lawrence. He avoided publicity so successfully that his role has almost entirely escaped the attention of historians of the period. He taught international relations at Woodbrooke, the Quaker college in Birmingham, where many students came from Europe, including, after 1933, refugees from Nazi Germany. Such contacts formed the basis for involvement with efforts to prevent the outbreak of the Second World War. This beautifully written biography relates the development of Alexander's commitment to a humane and just international order from its origins in Quaker pacifism and the optimistic liberal ideology prevailing in early twentieth-century Cambridge, to its attempted realisation in the League of Nations. As Geoffrey Carnall demonstrates Alexander saw Gandhi's ideas as a fulfilment of this vision, and sought to interpret them in terms comprehensible to people in the West.
There is so much more in this book, but space does not allow a more detailed analysis. It would probably require another book to do it justice. The only way is to get the book and read it. When you do, you will be amazed, informed and inspired. -- Jim Pym Universalist There is so much more in this book, but space does not allow a more detailed analysis. It would probably require another book to do it justice. The only way is to get the book and read it. When you do, you will be amazed, informed and inspired.
Geoffrey Carnall (deceased) was Honorary Fellow in The School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures at the University of Edinburgh.