Empire : the British imperial experience from 1765 to the present

書誌事項

Empire : the British imperial experience from 1765 to the present

Denis Judd

BasicBooks, 1997

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 15

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注記

Originally published: London : HarperCollins, 1996

Includes bibliographical references (p. 479-501) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In this impressively researched and always entertaining book, the esteemed British historian Denis Judd analyzes the imperial experience from the American revolution to the present day. He examines the ways in which the British Empire affected both rulers and ruled, and the roles of significant personalitiesfrom Queen Victoria to Nelson Mandela, Cecil Rhodes to Jomo Kenyatta, Joseph Chamberlain to Mahatma GhandiWhat was so special about the special relationship between Britain and the United States? Did the maintenance of the Empire artificially prolong Britains Great Power status? Did it encourage chauvinistic, even racist, attitudes? Were subjects better off under their own elites and leaders than under British rule? In the end, what does the balance sheet of the Empire look like? The British Empire radically altered the modern world. At its height, it governed over a quarter of the human race and encompassed more than a fifth of the globe. As well as providing the British people with profits and a sense of international purpose, the Empire afforded them the opportunity to create new lives for themselves through emigration and settlement. It supplied jobs at home and overseas, encouraged national aggrandizement, and allowed experiments in social engineering. For those it ruled over, the Empire often represented arbitrary power, gunboat diplomacy, and the disruption of local customs, social structures, and government by a distant and sometimes coldly unsympathetic administration. Yet while the Empire rested ultimately upon military force and direct rule, it also pulsated with idealsideals of freedom, democracy, and even equality. In this impressively researched and always entertaining book, the esteemed British historian Denis Judd analyzes the imperial experience from the American revolution to the present day. He examines the ways in which the British Empire affected both rulers and ruled, and the roles of significant personalitiesfrom Queen Victoria to Nelson Mandela, Cecil Rhodes to Jomo Kenyatta, Joseph Chamberlain to Mahatma GhandiWhat was so special about the special relationship between Britain and the United States? Did the maintenance of the Empire artificially prolong Britains Great Power status? Did it encourage chauvinistic, even racist, attitudes? Were subjects better off under their own elites and leaders than under British rule? In the end, what does the balance sheet of the Empire look like?The story of Empire is central to Britains national mythology and its sense of place in the world, and essential to an understanding of its changing role as we approach the end of the millennium. Denis Judds fine, magisterial history does full justice to a complex and epic theme.

目次

  • Anatomy of an Empire
  • The American Revolution
  • Australia
  • Ireland
  • Canada
  • The Repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846
  • The Great Indian Uprising of 1857-58
  • The Jamaica Rebellion
  • The Opening of the Suez Canal in 1869
  • The Battle of Majuba, 1881
  • Cecil Rhodes Legacy
  • Queen Victorias Diamond Jubilee, 1897
  • The Battle of Spion Kop, 1900
  • The Suicide of Sir Hector MacDonald, 1903
  • Joseph Chamberlain and the Cabinet Split of 1903
  • Scouting for Boys, 1908
  • The Imperial Conference of 1911
  • The Gandhi-Smuts Agreement of January 1914
  • The 1916 Easter Uprising in Ireland
  • The Armritsar Massacre of 1919
  • The 1924 British Empire Wembley Exhibition
  • The Balfour Definition of Dominion Status, 1926
  • The Bodyline Tour of Australia, 1932
  • The Fall of Singapore, February, 1942
  • The Partition of India, 1947
  • The Trial of Jomo Kenyatta, 1953
  • The Suez Crisis of 1956
  • Rhodesias Unilateral Declaration of Independence, November, 1965
  • The Declaration of Commonwealth Principles at Singapore, 1971
  • The Falklands War, 1982
  • The Inauguration of Nelson Mandela as President of South Africa, May 1994.

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