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- Wiley
More About This Title The British Empire - Themes and Perspectives
- English
English
- Each contributor offers a personal assessment of the topic at hand, and examines key interpretive debates among historians
- Addresses many of the core issues that constitute a broad understanding of the British Empire, including the economics of the empire, the empire and religion, and imperial identities
- English
English
- English
English
Foreword.
List of Abbreviations.
Maps.
1. Britain’s Empires: John Darwin.
2. Foundations of Empire, 1763-1783: Eliga Gould.
3. Empire and Ideology: Stephen Howe.
4. Empire and the British State: Andrew Thompson.
5. The British Empire on the Move, 1760-1914: Kent Fedorowich.
6. Economics and Empire: Andrew Dilley.
7. Religion in the British Empire: Elizabeth Elbourne.
8. Colonial Knowledge: Tony Ballantyne.
9. Agency, Narrative, and Resistance: Jon E. Wilson.
10. Culture and Identity in Imperial Britain: Catherine Hall.
11. Imperial Identities: Stuart Ward.
12. Ends of Empire: S. E. Stockwell.
Bibliography.
Index
- English
English
"By putting the 'old' political, economic, intellectual history in conversation with newer concerns about culture, gender, race, sexuality, identity-formation, and migration, this approach might be a very important way of reinvigorating the study of empire." (Victorian Studies, Autumn 2009)
"It will provide a most stimulating companion for students and researchers alike." (English Historical Review, June 2009)
"This book provides a wide-ranging, judicious, and insightful survey of some of the most important contemporary issues in British imperial and colonial historiography. Editor Stockwell (King's College London) has assembled 12 excellent essays on a representative sample of themes. Stockwell has cut through the polemics that have sometimes characterized scholarly debate in imperial history, demonstrating that the field's strengths are greater than the sum of its parts. Essential." (CHOICE, December 2008)
"An ideal guide to the enormous breadth, complexity and nuances of a vital historical topic, both for those new to it and even for experts. A remarkably successful blending of history, historiography, analysis and controversy. Freshly written, and remarkably consistent for a multi-authored work."–Bernard Porter, University of Newcastle