Dr. YANG Taoyu2026-06-182026-06-182026Journal of World History, 2026, vol. 37(2), pp. 289-333.1045-60071527-8050http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/27531<jats:p xml:lang="en">Abstract: This article examines the 1932 Hongkou Park Bombing Incident in Shanghai as a critical episode of anti-colonial resistance that reveals the entangled dynamics of empire, nationalism, and global political activism in the interwar period. Despite its historical significance, the incident remains relatively under-studied in English-language scholarship. This article addresses that gap by situating the bombing within the distinctive urban setting of interwar Shanghai. Drawing on multilingual archival sources and press coverage, this study shows how the bombing incident catalyzed a range of responses: it exposed the contra-dictions of British imperial strategy, prompted Franco-Japanese collaboration in colonial policing, and deepened covert support from the Chinese Nationalist Government. This article argues that the Hongkou Incident not only brought into sharp relief existing power differentials but also served as a catalyst for renegotiating power relations and modes of interaction among agents of multiple empires and local Chinese authorities in the city of Shanghai. In doing so, it contributes to global historiographies of anti-colonialism by demonstrating how interwar Shanghai functioned not only as a site of colonial governance and repression but also as a crucible of trans-Asian political mobilization and media discourse.</jats:p>enAnti-colonial activism and multi-imperial entanglements: Reassessing the 1932 Hongkou bombing incident in interwar ShanghaiPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1353/jwh.2026.a992201