Empire as the Triumph of Theory

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A01=Edward Beasley
African Career
Anthropology
Anti-slave Trade Squadrons
Archaeology
Author_Edward Beasley
British Multinational Banking
British social elites
Capitalism
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Category=NHTQ
Civilization
Civilizing mission
Class
colonial
Colonial Bankers
colonial discourse analysis
Colonial Reform
Colonial Reformers
Colonial Society
colonies
Colonization
cultural knowledge production
duke
East Indies
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eq_history
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eq_society-politics
Finance
founders
Free Trade
Gentlemanly Capitalists
Globalization
Governance
Governor Eyre Controversy
Ideology
Imperial Enthusiasm
Imperial Federation
Imperial Federation League
institute
Life Interest
London
main
manchester
Mercantilism
Metropole
Migration
Military
Missionary work
Morant Bay Rebellion
Napoleon III
National Library
Nationalism
nineteenth-century political thought
origins of British imperial ideology
pro-imperial advocacy
royal
Royal Geographical Society
Settlement
Sir Edmund Head
society
Spanish Language
SPG
Thomas Baring
UK Resident
Victorian intellectual history
Wife's Sister's Bill
Wife’s Sister’s Bill
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138882270
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Aug 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Who were the first people to invent a world-historical mission for the British Empire? And what were the constituencies behind the development of the imperialistic thinking in mid-Victorian England? These questions are vital for understanding where the New Imperialism of the late nineteenth century came from. Empire as the Triumph of Theory takes as its sample the more than two hundred earliest members of the first major pro-imperial pressure group: the Colonial Society (founded in 1868, it is now the Royal Commonwealth Society).
The book goes on to a careful and well-written tour of the different parts of the Victorian world, putting the founders of the Colonial society into their social contexts. Empire as the Triumph of Theory concludes that imperialism was developed less by investors and office holders than by people who, whatever their other activities, had written books or articles about the cultures of the world. Victorian activities around the globe were multitudinous and varied, and general ideas about England's imperial mission were, in fact, constructed by members of the Colonial Society, in order to make sense out of information flowing in from this teeming world.
This is the first work to explore the social and intellectual origins of the Colonial Society. It brings the mid-Victorians to life, and should become a standard work for specialists on imperialism.

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