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Item Details
Title:
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CIVILIZING SUBJECTS
METROPOLE AND COLONY IN THE ENGLISH IMAGINATION 1830-1867 |
By: |
Catherine Hall |
Format: |
Paperback |

List price:
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£24.99 |
Our price: |
£22.49 |
Discount: |
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You save:
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£2.50 |
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ISBN 10: |
0745618219 |
ISBN 13: |
9780745618210 |
Availability: |
Usually dispatched within 3-5 days.
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Stock: |
Currently 2 available |
Publisher: |
POLITY PRESS |
Pub. date: |
1 April, 2002 |
Pages: |
576 |
Description: |
Winner of the Morris D. Forkasch prize for the best book in British history 2002 Civilising Subjects argues that the empire was at the heart of nineteenth--century Englishness. |
Synopsis: |
Winner of the Morris D. Forkasch prize for the best book in British history 2002 Civilising Subjects argues that the empire was at the heart of nineteenth--century Englishness. English men and women in the mid--nineteenth century imagined themselves at the centre of a great empire: their mental and emotional maps encompassed a Aboriginesa in Australia, a negroesa in Jamaica, a cooliesa in the Indies. This sense of the other provided boundaries and markers of difference: ways of knowing who was a civiliseda and who was a savagea . This fascinating book tells intertwined stories of a particular group of Englishmen and women who constructed themselves as colonisers. Hall then uses these studies as a means of exploring wider colonial and cultural issues. One story focuses on the Baptist missionaries in Jamaica and their efforts to build a new society in the wake of emancipation. Their hope was to make Afro--Jamaican men and women into people like themselves. Disillusionment followed as it emerged that the making of a new selvesa was not as simple as they had thought, and that black men and women had minds and cultural resources of their own.The second story tells the tale of a the midland metropolisa , Birmingham, and the ways in which its culture was infused with empire. Abolitionist enthusiasm dominated the town in the 1830s but by the 1860s the identity of a friend of the negroa had been superseded by a harsher racial vocabulary. Birminghama s a manly citizensa imagined the non--white subjects of empire as different kinds of men from themselves. These two detailed studies, of Birmingham and Jamaica, are set within their wider context: the making of metropole and colony and of coloniser and colonised. The result is an absorbing study of the a racinga of Englishness, which will be invaluable for students and scholars of British imperial and cultural history. |
Illustrations: |
1, black & white illustrations |
Publication: |
UK |
Imprint: |
Polity Press |
Returns: |
Returnable |
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