This essay considers the way in which instances of defeat have been discussed, represented and put to use in the context of the history of modern imperialism. It argues that the response to moments of defeat has often been crucial in justifying the further expansion of imperial control, as well as in mobilising popular sympathy in support of imperial action. What is appealed to, in such representations, is often not an idea of strategic or economic interest as such, but a less easily defined or contested idea of honour or valour. The long historical roots of this idea reveal, apart from anything else, just how far empire was the context for a rapprochement between a newer and an older elite
This essay recovers a forgotten moment in the print culture history of US empire by examining a hand...
For over two centuries, liberal apologists for empire in Britain and America have been plagued by th...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
The legacy of defeat in war reverberates through private and collective memory and remains a sub-tex...
This contribution adds to the legal-philosophical approach to the subject of victory by focusing on ...
The revival of scholarly interest in the global history of imperialism is now well established and s...
Imperial history in general received very little attention in British universities until the 1950s. ...
Although empires have shaped the political development of virtually all the states of the modern wor...
The nature of Roman imperialism in the Republican period has been the subject of several recent work...
The triumphus conferred great military prestige on generals and emperors. Exploiting that prestige f...
Although the mood of defeat is usually seen as physically and emotionally debilitating, many histori...
Ever since the publication of “The Imperialism of Free Trade” by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson ...
Over the past few years there has been an intellectually controversial, strategically significant an...
This article examines the image of Empire developed in public discourse in Italy during the late Li...
While many historians of the British Empire have dismissed the presence of imperial motifs and theme...
This essay recovers a forgotten moment in the print culture history of US empire by examining a hand...
For over two centuries, liberal apologists for empire in Britain and America have been plagued by th...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
The legacy of defeat in war reverberates through private and collective memory and remains a sub-tex...
This contribution adds to the legal-philosophical approach to the subject of victory by focusing on ...
The revival of scholarly interest in the global history of imperialism is now well established and s...
Imperial history in general received very little attention in British universities until the 1950s. ...
Although empires have shaped the political development of virtually all the states of the modern wor...
The nature of Roman imperialism in the Republican period has been the subject of several recent work...
The triumphus conferred great military prestige on generals and emperors. Exploiting that prestige f...
Although the mood of defeat is usually seen as physically and emotionally debilitating, many histori...
Ever since the publication of “The Imperialism of Free Trade” by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson ...
Over the past few years there has been an intellectually controversial, strategically significant an...
This article examines the image of Empire developed in public discourse in Italy during the late Li...
While many historians of the British Empire have dismissed the presence of imperial motifs and theme...
This essay recovers a forgotten moment in the print culture history of US empire by examining a hand...
For over two centuries, liberal apologists for empire in Britain and America have been plagued by th...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...