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  • Cited by 10
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
December 2020
Print publication year:
2021
Online ISBN:
9781108584227

Book description

Ruling the World tells the story of how the largest and most diverse empire in history was governed, everywhere and all at once. Focusing on some of the most tumultuous years of Queen Victoria's reign, Alan Lester, Kate Boehme and Peter Mitchell adopt an entirely new perspective to explain how the men in charge of the British Empire sought to manage simultaneous events across the globe. Using case studies including Canada, South Africa, the Caribbean, Australia, India and Afghanistan, they reveal how the empire represented a complex series of trade-offs between Parliament's, colonial governors', colonists' and colonised peoples' agendas. They also highlight the compromises that these men made as they adapted their ideals of freedom, civilization and liberalism to the realities of an empire imposed through violence and governed in the interests of Britons.

Reviews

‘Ruling the World will change our understanding of the British Empire and the societies that were formed and transformed under its rule. Strikingly, it brings alive both the actions of individuals and the broader sweep of imperial history. Never before has a focus on the actions of elite white men been so enlightening for understanding what the empire meant for the Indigenous peoples they sought to govern.'

Ann Curthoys - co-author with Jessie Mitchell of Taking Liberty: Indigenous Rights and Settler Self-government in Colonial Australia, 1830–1890

‘A compelling analysis of how imperial government actually worked at three moments of crisis in the Victorian Empire. High aspirations clashed with geopolitical anxiety, and the pressure of lobbies at home and in the colonies: the recourse to violence was the default mode in a climate of entrenched racial prejudices. This is a major contribution to British imperial history.'

John Darwin - author of Unfinished Empire: The Global Expansion of Britain

‘Ruling the World takes three snapshots of metropole and empire in 1838, 1857 and 1879 to illuminate the scale of the endeavours to promote and enforce, sometimes with great violence, varieties of freedom/unfreedom, British notions of white civilization, and liberal/illiberal governance on colonized others. An ambitious and engrossing read which insists on confronting the discriminatory and rapacious realities of empire.'

Catherine Hall - author of Civilising Subjects: Metropole and Colony in the English Imagination 1830–1867

‘This excellent book considers these topics and many more in a sophisticated approach that echoes the finest work of earlier generations of historians whose research is often unknown to today’s postmodernists and post-Saidian commentators. This is a superb contribution to imperial studies … Highly recommended.’

R. D. Long Source: Choice

‘Ruling the World breathes new life into the history of British imperial administration.’

Alex Middleton Source: University of Oxford

‘… the book provides concrete material out of which a renovated theory of Victorian racist practice might be developed.’

Nathan K. Hensley Source: Victorian Studies

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