
Shrabani Basu
Image of Shrabani Basu
The First World War saw 1.5 million volunteers from India rallying under the British flag and fighting for their lives in the trenches.
Less than six months later, the Jallianwala Bagh massacre saw hundreds of innocent men, women, and children killed.
The end of the war did not bring respite from conflict and all those who had fought returned to a different India.
1920s Britain also saw the dawn of a new era. As political boundaries in Europe were redrawn and the bright lights were switched on again, Britain saw a renewed emphasis on empire and glory.
From the Empire Exhibition at Wembley to the growing spirit of nationalism among young Indians in Britain, in this talk Shrabani Basu looks at how the 1920s laid the foundation for the turbulence and tension that lay ahead within the British Empire.
Shrabani Basu is a journalist and Sunday Times best-selling author. Her books include the critically acclaimed The Mystery of the Parsee Lawyer(2021) , For King and Another Country (2015), Victoria & Abdul (2010, now a major Oscar-nominated motion picture)and Spy Princes: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan(2006).
Shrabani is a frequent commentator on Indian history and Empire
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