Titled "Age of Anger - A History of the Present", the book justifies the 47-year-old writer's "the heir to Edward Said" tag where he offers enriching explanations of the pressing issues facing the world through past and argues incisively that there is not much new in the "divided modern world" except the history that is either forgotten or is intentionally ignored.
Debunking the vapid 'free versus unfree', 'the west versus Islam' binaries of the clash-of-civilisation theorists and other experts who resort to them while explaining global upheavals, Mishra cogently argues that the roots of today's "universal crisis" lie not in religious extremism but in the West's "extraordinarily brutal" experiment with modernity and its blind replication elsewhere.
He says that large parts of Asia and Africa were now plunging deeper into the West's "fateful experience of modernity", that the regions were first exposed to through European imperialism.
Invoking Enlightenment thinkers such as Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu and Tocqueville among others shows how the history of modernisation is largely "one of carnage and bedlam" rather than peaceful convergence.
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Noting that the world has witnessed some "historically recurring phenomena", Mishra says that early nineteenth century's great economic and political revolutions which promised freedom, liberty and widespread equality through growth, industralisation and nation-building cast billions adrift, leaving them "uprooted" from tradition but still far from modernity.
Drawing a connection between the two distant eras, Mishra
goes on to add that it is only by examining their fears, resentments and hatred that our own "age of anger" can be truly understood.
Mishra declares that in the age of globalisation which dawned after the fall of the Berlin Wall, political life became steadily clamorous with unlimited demands for individual freedoms and satisfactions.
"Globalisation has everywhere weakened older forms of authority, in Europe's social democracies as well as Arab despotisms, and thrown up an array of new international actors, from English and Chinese nationalists, Somali pirates, human traffickers and anonymous cyber hackers to Boko Haram," he notes.
Mishra states that while "maligned minds" of ISIS have used today's globalised world to their advantage and turned the internet into an effective propaganda tool for global jihad, demagogues of all shades have also thrived in this interdependent world.
"Demagogues of all kinds, from Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan to India's Narendra Modi, France's Marine Le Pen and America's Donald Trump, have tapped into the simmering reservoirs of cynicism, boredom and discontent," he reaffirms.
About Bush administration's much-hyped universal 'war on terror', Mishra claims that the policy has failed to yield any results and lies in tatters.
"Malignant zealots have emerged in the very heart of the democratic West after a decade of political and economic tumult; the simple explanatory paradigm set in stone soon after the attacks of 9/11 - Islam-inspired terrorism versus modernity - lies in ruins," Mishra adds.
Brilliantly argued, outstanding in its intellectual range, and with a canvas that stretches from Savarkar in India to Rousseau in France, "Age of Anger" is a book of immense urgency.