[Extract] In The Trouble with Empire, Antoinette Burton explores how violence accompanied the imperial project wherever it went. Arising from a perennial struggle between imperial expansionism and counter-resistance, she argues, violence emerged as an inherent feature of Britain’s colonial frontiers. Although it sometimes took the form of large-scale warfare, colonial violence predominantly manifested itself as innumerable, small-scale insurrections that perpetually called forth Britain’s military interventions. The level of repressive violence that was required to shore up Britain’s fragile rule over its extensive territories belied its own understanding of itself as a harbinger of civilisation. Rather than representing a benign civilising...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
The British Empire was never as orderly as its architects would have us believe. Across the British ...
Violence has always been central to the complex histories of empire that reach back over four centur...
Violence has always been central to the complex histories of empire that reach back over four centur...
This book explores the theme of violence, repression and atrocity in imperial and colonial empires, ...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
The period between the 1830s and the 1910s is significant for the rapid expansion of the British and...
<p>Victorian England was the first empire in history to imagine itself as liberal, believing that it...
This dissertation traces the complex ways in which non-European military cultures â often designated...
What was the relationship between international law and colonial warfare in the period of both incre...
© 2013 Hamish John WilliamsonThe decade-and-a-half between the outbreak of the Second Boer War and t...
This article addresses how (‘selective’) British memory has served to emphasize the extreme violence...
Violence had assumed sundry roles in a colonial setting; of them, the most severe, but also perhaps ...
Camps are emblems of the modern world, but they first appeared under the imperial tutelage of Victor...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
The British Empire was never as orderly as its architects would have us believe. Across the British ...
Violence has always been central to the complex histories of empire that reach back over four centur...
Violence has always been central to the complex histories of empire that reach back over four centur...
This book explores the theme of violence, repression and atrocity in imperial and colonial empires, ...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
The period between the 1830s and the 1910s is significant for the rapid expansion of the British and...
<p>Victorian England was the first empire in history to imagine itself as liberal, believing that it...
This dissertation traces the complex ways in which non-European military cultures â often designated...
What was the relationship between international law and colonial warfare in the period of both incre...
© 2013 Hamish John WilliamsonThe decade-and-a-half between the outbreak of the Second Boer War and t...
This article addresses how (‘selective’) British memory has served to emphasize the extreme violence...
Violence had assumed sundry roles in a colonial setting; of them, the most severe, but also perhaps ...
Camps are emblems of the modern world, but they first appeared under the imperial tutelage of Victor...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
Why are contemporary laws and techniques that state authorities use to crack down on political disse...
The British Empire was never as orderly as its architects would have us believe. Across the British ...