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Empire Without End: A New History of Britain and the Caribbean [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 528 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 241x165x45 mm, kaal: 762 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Fern Press
  • ISBN-10: 1911717030
  • ISBN-13: 9781911717034
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  • Kõva köide
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 528 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 241x165x45 mm, kaal: 762 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Fern Press
  • ISBN-10: 1911717030
  • ISBN-13: 9781911717034
Teised raamatud teemal:
A powerful and important reckoning with Britain's imperial legacy and contemporary systemic racism

'A richly told history of Empire from which we cannot turn away' AFUA HIRSCH

'Id have loved to have read such a book when I was a schoolboy' COLIN GRANT

From the 1500s to the mid-twentieth century, the events that took place in the Caribbean from conquest, colonisation and capitalism to racial slavery, revolution and migration and the people who forged them played a seminal role in creating modern Britain and the Anglophone Caribbean. By the 1960s, Western global empires had begun to crumble. Yet the British Empire in the Caribbean did not end. Instead, colonialism was replaced with a new type of power whose impact can still be felt: neo-colonialism.

Empire Without End offers a new interpretation of the British Empire, its enduring entanglement with the Anglophone Caribbean and the longevity of systemic racism. Taking a longer historical perspective starting in the period of European contact with the Caribbean and ending today, Imaobong Umoren looks at the impact and legacies of racial slavery to explore how later linked histories relating to capitalism, class, labour, war, political economy, poverty, gender and culture are crucial to telling the full story. In doing so, she sets out a compelling strategy to define our roles and responsibilities in challenging the legacy of colonialism and hierarchy a legacy that continues to blight our society and our politics.

Arvustused

Rewardingly readable . . . Empire Without End is a valuable and accessible compendium with Umoren skilfully distilling complicated histories . . . With forensic analysis, Umoren skewers British mendacity perfected over centuries -- Colin Grant * Observer * Powerful . . . [ An] ambitious and arresting work of impressive historical scope and scale * Times Literary Supplement * Ambitious, powerfully argued and beautifully shaped, written, illustrated and produced -- Robert Gildea Gracefully and insightfully, Empire Without End demonstrates the profound interconnectedness of the contemporary world: the ways in which Britain was made, and the Caribbean unmade, and how politics and culture were profoundly shaped in very different societies. Anyone seeking to understand the upsurge of racial imperialism in our own time cannot afford to miss it -- Pankaj Mishra This book carefully places todays racial injustice where it belongs in the context of a richly told, unending history of Empire from which we cannot turn away -- Afua Hirsch The book that we have needed for so long, illuminating a narrative that has long been scattered among fragments of other stories. An elegant and powerful triumph of historical narration of a five-hundred-year-old story that binds Britain and the Caribbean till today. In clear and compassionate prose, Imaobong Umoren calls on us to reckon collectively with this past, laying the groundwork for us to do so with this epic account -- Priya Satia, Raymond A. Spruance Professor of International History at Stanford University A very powerful account of the entanglements between Britain and the Caribbean, from the moment that planters first appreciated the profits they could make from sugar and slavery to Black Lives Matter and the backlash against it -- Alan Lester An all-encompassing, immensely readable, centuries-spanning history of the Caribbeans relationship with Britain it deserves to reach a wide, general audience * History Today *

IMAOBONG UMOREN is an associate professor of International History at the London School of Economics where she specialises in histories of racism, women and political thought in the Caribbean, Britain and US in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Empire Without End received the 20202021 British Library Eccles Centre and Hay Festival Writers Award.