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Critical Perspectives on Empire

This series delves into critical studies of empire, exploring the complex connections between national and global histories. It focuses on the exchanges, knowledge, and flows of people and ideas that shaped colonial contact. The collection offers ambitious, cross-disciplinary perspectives that are reconfiguring our understanding of the past and ourselves. It is designed for readers seeking a deeper engagement with imperial and postcolonial dynamics.

Imperial Emotions
Violence and Colonial Order
Colonization and the Origins of Humanitarian Governance
The Anticolonial Front
Colonial Relations
The Cultural Politics of Obeah
  • The Cultural Politics of Obeah

    • 376 pages
    • 14 hours of reading

    An innovative history of the politics and practice of the Caribbean spiritual healing techniques known as obeah. Diana Paton traces how representations of obeah were entangled with key moments in Caribbean history, from eighteenth- century slave rebellions to the formation of new nations after independence.

    The Cultural Politics of Obeah
    4.4
  • Colonial Relations

    • 310 pages
    • 11 hours of reading

    A new perspective on the nineteenth-century imperial world through one family's history across North America, the Caribbean and United Kingdom.

    Colonial Relations
    4.1
  • The Anticolonial Front

    • 346 pages
    • 13 hours of reading

    Focusing on the interconnectedness of the Black freedom struggle in the United States, this book explores its ties to global liberation movements. It highlights the shared experiences and mutual influences among various struggles for justice and equality, emphasizing the importance of solidarity and collective action in the fight against oppression worldwide. Through historical analysis and contemporary examples, it illustrates how local movements resonate on a global scale, enriching the understanding of social justice efforts.

    The Anticolonial Front
  • The narrative explores the efforts of key figures in Britain's nineteenth-century empire to reconcile the expansion of colonialism with humanitarian ideals. It delves into the justifications and practices that aimed to present colonization as a benevolent endeavor, highlighting the complexities and contradictions inherent in this historical period. Through an analysis of policies and attitudes, the book sheds light on the motivations behind imperial actions and their impacts on both colonizers and the colonized.

    Colonization and the Origins of Humanitarian Governance
    2.7
  • This book offers a compelling analysis of colonial policing and political violence across three empires during the interwar period. It delves into the complexities of imperial power dynamics, examining how policing methods shaped societal control and resistance. Through a detailed exploration of historical contexts, the author highlights the interplay between colonial authorities and local populations, revealing the lasting impacts of these violent encounters on contemporary governance and societal structures.

    Violence and Colonial Order
    3.8
  • Imperial Emotions

    • 235 pages
    • 9 hours of reading

    Emotions are not universal, but are experienced and expressed differently across cultures and times. Jane Lydon examines how emotions were used to justify, advance or contest imperialism by creating relationships between British subjects across the globe, but also by excluding specific groups.

    Imperial Emotions
    4.0