It is rare to encounter a book that directly and effectively challenges the central paradigms of its field, and rarer still for one to do so successfully. In this book, Antoinette Burton ... takes up this task with her characteristic verve ... The implications of this argument are profound. Not only should the narrative history of the British Empire be reinterpreted as one of constant instability and challenge, but the fundamental precepts of so much imperial historiography must also be re-examined ... Burton has brought trouble, and those who caused it, to the centre of imperial history, and presented a powerful argument against any who would view the sunrise and sunset of Britain's empire without careful consideration of the long, fraught and turbulent day that lay between them.

Sascha Auerbach, English Historical Review

Antoinette Burton provides an entertaining overview of resistance.

Peter Robb, The Historian

Burton ... makes her complex and usefully provocative case easily accessible to a broad range of readers, as she challenges them to restore agency to colonial subjects, who are all too often in works of British imperial history largely invisible except as a passive collectivity ... [Burton] bolsters the construction of a multicultural British history -- and by extension society -- by giving colonial subjects a central role.

Stephanie Barczewski, Times Literary Supplement

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The Trouble with Empire will reinvigorate debates about imperial history and take those debates to a wider audience

Jonathan Saha, American Historical Review

Incredibly, there is no comprehensive history dedicated to resistance in the 19th and 20th century British empire. This is not for want of attention to the enemies of imperialism. There are accounts of the nature and character of colonial discourse and of the response of discrete nationalist figures and organizations to the incursions of the colonial state. There are narratives of episodic rebellion and uprising and diagnoses of imperial fatigue and decline. There are even a few choice histories of metropolitan anti-imperialism. But synthetic analyses of those who struggled with and against imperial power have failed to materialize, even as imperial blockbusters fly off the shelves, both virtual and real. This is particularly striking in an era of spectacular and empire-humbling counterinsurgency like our own. The "Pax Britannica" is thus not simply an ornamental trace of mid- to high-Victorian optimism that guaranteed the benefits of the civilizing mission. In the absence of counter-narratives of protest, resistance and revolution, it remains the working presumption of British imperial history in the 21st century. This project offers the first thoroughgoing account of what British imperialism looked like from below and of how tenuous its hold on alien populations was throughout its long, unstable life. The Trouble with Empire is intended as a brief but thorough introduction to the nature and consequences of resistance to British imperialism. It spans the 19th and 20th centuries, when discontented subjects of empire made their unhappiness felt across the globe, from Ireland to Canada to India to Africa to Australasia, in direct response to incursions of military might and imperial capitalism. Some of these instances, such as the Indian Mutiny and the Anglo-Zulu War, are extremely well known. Those deemed "lesser" -- the first and second Afghan Wars and the Opium War, for example -- have also gained notoriety as Queen Victoria's "little wars." By taking the long view, moving not just across a variety of geopolitical sites but also across the whole of the period 1840-1955, the commonalities between ostensibly different forms of resistance-in political settings, at workplaces, and at borders--can be better seen and, thus, the structural weaknesses of imperial formations can be examined. The emphasis on the power of protest is intended, in other words, not only to reveal indigenous agency but to illuminate the limits of imperial power, official and unofficial, as well.
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A short, idea driven history of resistance to the British empire, written by a senior British historian.
Acknowledgments Introduction: The Troubled Ground of Empire Chapter 1: Subject to Setback: Pax Britannica and the Question of Military Victory Chapter 2: Subject to Interruption: Economic Protest and the Limits of Imperial Order Chapter 3: Subject to Insurgency: Enemies of Empire and the Challenge to Governability Epilogue: Toward a Minority History of British Imperialism Notes Select Bibliography Index
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"It is rare to encounter a book that directly and effectively challenges the central paradigms of its field, and rarer still for one to do so successfully. In this book, Antoinette Burton ... takes up this task with her characteristic verve ... The implications of this argument are profound. Not only should the narrative history of the British Empire be reinterpreted as one of constant instability and challenge, but the fundamental precepts of so much imperial historiography must also be re-examined ... Burton has brought trouble, and those who caused it, to the centre of imperial history, and presented a powerful argument against any who would view the sunrise and sunset of Britain's empire without careful consideration of the long, fraught and turbulent day that lay between them." -- Sascha Auerbach, English Historical Review "Antoinette Burton provides an entertaining overview of resistance..."--Peter Robb, The Historian "[A]n exciting read for historians who have engaged with histories of dissent, and it should be required reading for historians of the British Empire more generally....[I]deal for undergraduate students in particular. It is eloquently written and forcefully argued."--Kate O'Malley, Victorian Studies "Antoinette Burton's The Trouble with Empire: Challenges to Modern British Imperialism is an exciting read for historians who have engaged with histories of dissent, and it should be required reading for historians of the British Empire more generally....It is eloquently written and forcefully argued."--Kate O'Malley, Victorian Studies "Antoinette Burton has argued influentially for a new imperial history that draws insights from cultural, social, economic, political, and gender studies and merges domestic British history with that of the British Empire. The Trouble with Empire is a stirring call to advance that historiography by centering it on challenges to empire, rather than taking for granted British strength and the traditional narrative arc of imperial rise and fall....Written clearly and vigorously with admirable lack of jargon, The Trouble with Empire will be crucial for graduate courses on empire and extremely valuable for scholars working on empire, decolonization, and colonialism's legacies for the world today. Advanced undergraduate researchers will also find it helpful. It is simultaneously a satisfying read and a stimulating one, which will inspire scholars to continue along the paths Burton has marked out."--Lucy P. Chester, Journal of Modern History "The Trouble with Empire is an important corrective to a number of long-running assumptions within imperial historiography. Accessibly written and reasonably priced, it should become required reading for graduate and undergraduate students of European imperialism and of modern Britain. It will also appeal to anyone interested in the lasting impact of empire on our contemporary world."--Ellen Boucher, History "At a time when voices increasingly suggest that the imperial turn is over, this fine essay by Antoinette Burton comes as a salutary reminder that even in the case of Britain, much work remains to be done before we have anything like a complete account of the imperial experience What Burton does so well is to demonstrate that such incidences, far from being sporadic and isolated, were part of the quotidian reality of colonial rule, and unless and until they are integrated fully into narratives of empire, our grasp of the imperial experience as a whole remains impoverished."--John Marriott, Journal of British Studies "A brilliant work of synthesis...[with] a convincing and provocative overarching argument The Trouble with Empire effectively demolishes the rise-and-fall narrative of imperial history, exposing its baseless foundational assumptions. It succeeds in bringing the rebellious actions of colonized populations to the fore in all of their diversity While The Trouble with Empire will reinvigorate debates about imperial history and take those debates to a wider audience, it should also be troubling for imperial historians as they continue to confront the challenges facing the field."--Jonathan Saha, American Historical Review "Provocative and relevant...Make[s] a plausible case that even at its apex, 'the empire on which the sun never set' contained the seeds of its own destruction."--Andrew Moravcsik, Foreign Affairs "The multiple tensions that characterized the empire are thoroughly familiar to historians who work in the local archives of empire. But they are only now beginning to be taken seriously by imperial historians. How to integrate them into a history of empire is a challenging and important task. Antoinette Burton has taken a first shot at how we may do this from an imperial history perspective, and for that we should be thankful."--Richard N. Price, H-Empire "[Burton] makes her complex and usefully provocative case easily accessible to a broad range of readers, as she challenges them to restore agency to colonial subjects, who are all too often in works of British imperial history largely invisible except as a passive collectivity [Burton] bolsters the construction of a multicultural British history--and by extension society--by giving colonial subjects a central role."--Stephanie Barczewski, Times Literary Supplement "Bringing her signature independence of mind and sense of moral purpose to this work, Antoinette Burton challenges us to think of the British Empire less as a site of power than as a source of continuous struggle and instability. Provocative in purpose and sweeping in scope, The Trouble with Empire demands the attention of everyone interested in the history of empires."--Dane Kennedy, George Washington University "Unmasking what she calls the 'methodological imperialism' that has taken empire as a given, Antoinette Burton manages to upend stubborn scholarly and commonplace perceptions that underlie much of imperial history. Her focus on the routine and everyday 'trouble' at the heart of empire exposes an inherently unstable, messy, and markedly less-assured enterprise. This brilliant, passionate, and iconoclastic book will change how we think about imperial history."--Mrinalini Sinha, University of Michigan "Burton brings together trends in feminist and subaltern histories in order to complicate the historiographical narratives of British imperialism. Burton aims to provide a counter-narrative to histories such as Niall Ferguson's Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World. In doing so, she is bridging the gap between these more populist histories and scholarly works. New students of imperialism at the undergraduate level will enjoy this book as an introduction to British imperialism, while her nuancing of the narratives will appeal to a wider audience who may be interested in histories of empire."--Denis Gonyo, Reviews in History "Today, in the age of ethno-nationalism on both sides of the Atlantic, the limits of Western power are more apparent than ever. The urge to downsize empire in historical writing-to probe the contradictions and conflicts which undermined it-matches this moment well. Burton's achievement is to chronicle these weaknesses while still accounting for the very real damage empire could do."--Erik Linstrum, Journal of World History
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Selling point: Makes a controversial argument challenging the rise and fall narrative of British history Selling point: De-centers large and well-known events like the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and moves smaller-scale insurrections to the foreground Selling point: Offers the first thoroughgoing account of what British imperialism looked like from below and of how tenuous its hold on alien populations was
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Antoinette Burton is Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies and Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation fellowship, she is the author of numerous works on the British empire, women and feminism, and world history, including At the Heart of the Empire: Indians and the Colonial Encounter in Late-Victorian Britain and Empire in Question: Reading, Writing and Teaching British Imperialism.
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Selling point: Makes a controversial argument challenging the rise and fall narrative of British history Selling point: De-centers large and well-known events like the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and moves smaller-scale insurrections to the foreground Selling point: Offers the first thoroughgoing account of what British imperialism looked like from below and of how tenuous its hold on alien populations was
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199936601
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
476 gr
Høyde
148 mm
Bredde
218 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Biographical note

Antoinette Burton is Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies and Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. A John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellow (2010-11), she is the author of numerous works on the British empire, women and feminism, and world history.