The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire
Herausgeber: Thomas, Martin; Thompson, Andrew
The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire
Herausgeber: Thomas, Martin; Thompson, Andrew
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The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire offers the most comprehensive treatment of the causes, course, and consequences of the collapse of empires in the twentieth century. The volume's contributors convey the global reach of decolonization, analysing the ways in which European, Asian, and African empires disintegrated over the past century.
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The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire offers the most comprehensive treatment of the causes, course, and consequences of the collapse of empires in the twentieth century. The volume's contributors convey the global reach of decolonization, analysing the ways in which European, Asian, and African empires disintegrated over the past century.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. März 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1414g
- ISBN-13: 9780198900948
- ISBN-10: 0198900945
- Artikelnr.: 69191166
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. März 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1414g
- ISBN-13: 9780198900948
- ISBN-10: 0198900945
- Artikelnr.: 69191166
Martin Thomas is Professor of Imperial History and Director of the Centre for Histories of Violence and Conflict at the University of Exeter. A specialist in the politics of contested decolonization, his most recent publications are Violence and Colonial Order: Police, Workers and Protest in the European Colonial Empires, 1918-1940 (2012), Fight or Flight: Britain, France, and their Roads from Empire (2014), and, with co-author Richard Toye, Arguing about Empire: Imperial Rhetoric in Britain and France (2017). He is an Independent Social Research Foundation Fellow and coordinator of a Leverhulme Trust research network, Understanding Insurgencies: Resonances from the Colonial Past. Andrew Thompson's previous publications include The Empire Strikes Back? The Impact of Imperialism on Britain from the Mid-Nineteenth Century (2005), Empire and Globalisation. Networks of People, Goods and Capital in the British World, c.1850-1914 (2010), and an edited collection, Britain's Experience of Empire in the Twentieth Century (2011). He is currently Professor of Global and Imperial History at the University of Oxford and Co-Director of the Oxford Centre for Global History. He is a Professorial Fellow of Nuffield College. He serves on the editorial boards of South African Historical Journal and Twentieth Century British History.
* Acknowledgements
* Introduction: Rethinking decolonization: A New Research Agenda for
the 21st Century
* 1918 and the End of Europe's Land Empires
* An Empire Unredeemed: Tracing the Ottoman State's Path towards
Collapse
* Part I: National Perspectives
* 1: Sarah E. Stockwell: Britain
* 2: Emmanuelle Saada: France: the longue dur^andeacute^e of French
Decolonization
* 3: Andreas Eckert: Germany
* 4: Nicola Labanca: Exceptional Italy? The Many Ends of the Italian
Colonial Empire
* 5: Matthew G. Stanard: Apr^andegrave^s nous, le d^andeacute^luge:
Belgium, Decolonization, and the Congo
* 6: Norrie MacQueen: Portugal
* 7: Alexey Miller: The Collapse of the Romanov Empire
* 8: Marc-William Palen: Empire by Imitation? US Economic Imperialism
within a British World System
* 9: Louise Conrad Young: Rethinking Empire: Lessons from Imperial and
Post Imperial Japan
* 10: Tehyun Ma: China
* Part II: Regional Perspectives
* 11: Joya Chatterji: Decolonization in South Asia: The Long View
* 12: Christopher Goscha: Global Wars and Decolonization in East and
South East Asia, 1927-1954
* 13: Sylvie Th^andeacute^nault: The End of Empire in the Maghreb: The
Common Heritage and Distinct Destinies of Morocco, Algeria, and
Tunisia
* 14: Frederick Cooper: Decolonization in Tropical Africa
* 15: Spencer Mawby: The Caribbean
* 16: James Mark and Quinn Slobodian: Eastern Europe
* 17: Robert S. G. Fletcher: Decolonization and the Arid World
* 18: Marieke Bloembergen: The Open Ends of the Dutch Empire and the
Indonesian Past: Sites, Scholarly Networks, and Moral Geographies of
Greater India across Decolonization
* Part III: Thematic Perspectives
* 19: Brad Simpson: Self-determination and Decolonization
* 20: Christopher J. Lee: Anti-colonialism
* 21: Andrew Thompson: Unravelling the Relationships between
Humanitarianism, Human Rights, and Decolonization: Time for a Radical
Rethink?
* 22: Piero Gleijeses: Decolonization and Cold War
* 23: Martin Thomas: Violence, Insurgency, and Ends of Empire
* 24: Barbara Bush: Nationalism, Development, and Welfare Colonialism:
Gender and the Dynamics of Decolonization
* 25: Miguel Bandeira Jer^andoacute^nimo: Repressive Developmentalism:
Idioms, Repertoires, and Trajectories in Late Colonialism
* 26: David Motadel: Islamic Revolutionaries and the End of Empire
* 27: Panikos Panayi: Refugees and the End of Empire
* Part IV: Legacies and Memories
* 28: Elizabeth Buettner: Postcolonial Migrations to Europe
* 29: Joseph Morgan Hodge: Beyond Dependency: North-South Relationships
in the Age of Development
* 30: Nicholas J. White: Imperial Business Interests, Decolonization
and Post- Colonial Diversification
* 31: Paul Cooke: Film and the End of Empire: Deconstructing and
Reconstructing Colonial Pasts and their Legacy in World Cinemas
* 32: Michael J. Parsons: Remnants of Empire
* 33: Charles Forsdick: Literature and Decolonization
* 34: Robert Aldrich: Apologies, Restitutions and Compensation: Making
Reparations for Colonialism
* Introduction: Rethinking decolonization: A New Research Agenda for
the 21st Century
* 1918 and the End of Europe's Land Empires
* An Empire Unredeemed: Tracing the Ottoman State's Path towards
Collapse
* Part I: National Perspectives
* 1: Sarah E. Stockwell: Britain
* 2: Emmanuelle Saada: France: the longue dur^andeacute^e of French
Decolonization
* 3: Andreas Eckert: Germany
* 4: Nicola Labanca: Exceptional Italy? The Many Ends of the Italian
Colonial Empire
* 5: Matthew G. Stanard: Apr^andegrave^s nous, le d^andeacute^luge:
Belgium, Decolonization, and the Congo
* 6: Norrie MacQueen: Portugal
* 7: Alexey Miller: The Collapse of the Romanov Empire
* 8: Marc-William Palen: Empire by Imitation? US Economic Imperialism
within a British World System
* 9: Louise Conrad Young: Rethinking Empire: Lessons from Imperial and
Post Imperial Japan
* 10: Tehyun Ma: China
* Part II: Regional Perspectives
* 11: Joya Chatterji: Decolonization in South Asia: The Long View
* 12: Christopher Goscha: Global Wars and Decolonization in East and
South East Asia, 1927-1954
* 13: Sylvie Th^andeacute^nault: The End of Empire in the Maghreb: The
Common Heritage and Distinct Destinies of Morocco, Algeria, and
Tunisia
* 14: Frederick Cooper: Decolonization in Tropical Africa
* 15: Spencer Mawby: The Caribbean
* 16: James Mark and Quinn Slobodian: Eastern Europe
* 17: Robert S. G. Fletcher: Decolonization and the Arid World
* 18: Marieke Bloembergen: The Open Ends of the Dutch Empire and the
Indonesian Past: Sites, Scholarly Networks, and Moral Geographies of
Greater India across Decolonization
* Part III: Thematic Perspectives
* 19: Brad Simpson: Self-determination and Decolonization
* 20: Christopher J. Lee: Anti-colonialism
* 21: Andrew Thompson: Unravelling the Relationships between
Humanitarianism, Human Rights, and Decolonization: Time for a Radical
Rethink?
* 22: Piero Gleijeses: Decolonization and Cold War
* 23: Martin Thomas: Violence, Insurgency, and Ends of Empire
* 24: Barbara Bush: Nationalism, Development, and Welfare Colonialism:
Gender and the Dynamics of Decolonization
* 25: Miguel Bandeira Jer^andoacute^nimo: Repressive Developmentalism:
Idioms, Repertoires, and Trajectories in Late Colonialism
* 26: David Motadel: Islamic Revolutionaries and the End of Empire
* 27: Panikos Panayi: Refugees and the End of Empire
* Part IV: Legacies and Memories
* 28: Elizabeth Buettner: Postcolonial Migrations to Europe
* 29: Joseph Morgan Hodge: Beyond Dependency: North-South Relationships
in the Age of Development
* 30: Nicholas J. White: Imperial Business Interests, Decolonization
and Post- Colonial Diversification
* 31: Paul Cooke: Film and the End of Empire: Deconstructing and
Reconstructing Colonial Pasts and their Legacy in World Cinemas
* 32: Michael J. Parsons: Remnants of Empire
* 33: Charles Forsdick: Literature and Decolonization
* 34: Robert Aldrich: Apologies, Restitutions and Compensation: Making
Reparations for Colonialism
* Acknowledgements
* Introduction: Rethinking decolonization: A New Research Agenda for
the 21st Century
* 1918 and the End of Europe's Land Empires
* An Empire Unredeemed: Tracing the Ottoman State's Path towards
Collapse
* Part I: National Perspectives
* 1: Sarah E. Stockwell: Britain
* 2: Emmanuelle Saada: France: the longue dur^andeacute^e of French
Decolonization
* 3: Andreas Eckert: Germany
* 4: Nicola Labanca: Exceptional Italy? The Many Ends of the Italian
Colonial Empire
* 5: Matthew G. Stanard: Apr^andegrave^s nous, le d^andeacute^luge:
Belgium, Decolonization, and the Congo
* 6: Norrie MacQueen: Portugal
* 7: Alexey Miller: The Collapse of the Romanov Empire
* 8: Marc-William Palen: Empire by Imitation? US Economic Imperialism
within a British World System
* 9: Louise Conrad Young: Rethinking Empire: Lessons from Imperial and
Post Imperial Japan
* 10: Tehyun Ma: China
* Part II: Regional Perspectives
* 11: Joya Chatterji: Decolonization in South Asia: The Long View
* 12: Christopher Goscha: Global Wars and Decolonization in East and
South East Asia, 1927-1954
* 13: Sylvie Th^andeacute^nault: The End of Empire in the Maghreb: The
Common Heritage and Distinct Destinies of Morocco, Algeria, and
Tunisia
* 14: Frederick Cooper: Decolonization in Tropical Africa
* 15: Spencer Mawby: The Caribbean
* 16: James Mark and Quinn Slobodian: Eastern Europe
* 17: Robert S. G. Fletcher: Decolonization and the Arid World
* 18: Marieke Bloembergen: The Open Ends of the Dutch Empire and the
Indonesian Past: Sites, Scholarly Networks, and Moral Geographies of
Greater India across Decolonization
* Part III: Thematic Perspectives
* 19: Brad Simpson: Self-determination and Decolonization
* 20: Christopher J. Lee: Anti-colonialism
* 21: Andrew Thompson: Unravelling the Relationships between
Humanitarianism, Human Rights, and Decolonization: Time for a Radical
Rethink?
* 22: Piero Gleijeses: Decolonization and Cold War
* 23: Martin Thomas: Violence, Insurgency, and Ends of Empire
* 24: Barbara Bush: Nationalism, Development, and Welfare Colonialism:
Gender and the Dynamics of Decolonization
* 25: Miguel Bandeira Jer^andoacute^nimo: Repressive Developmentalism:
Idioms, Repertoires, and Trajectories in Late Colonialism
* 26: David Motadel: Islamic Revolutionaries and the End of Empire
* 27: Panikos Panayi: Refugees and the End of Empire
* Part IV: Legacies and Memories
* 28: Elizabeth Buettner: Postcolonial Migrations to Europe
* 29: Joseph Morgan Hodge: Beyond Dependency: North-South Relationships
in the Age of Development
* 30: Nicholas J. White: Imperial Business Interests, Decolonization
and Post- Colonial Diversification
* 31: Paul Cooke: Film and the End of Empire: Deconstructing and
Reconstructing Colonial Pasts and their Legacy in World Cinemas
* 32: Michael J. Parsons: Remnants of Empire
* 33: Charles Forsdick: Literature and Decolonization
* 34: Robert Aldrich: Apologies, Restitutions and Compensation: Making
Reparations for Colonialism
* Introduction: Rethinking decolonization: A New Research Agenda for
the 21st Century
* 1918 and the End of Europe's Land Empires
* An Empire Unredeemed: Tracing the Ottoman State's Path towards
Collapse
* Part I: National Perspectives
* 1: Sarah E. Stockwell: Britain
* 2: Emmanuelle Saada: France: the longue dur^andeacute^e of French
Decolonization
* 3: Andreas Eckert: Germany
* 4: Nicola Labanca: Exceptional Italy? The Many Ends of the Italian
Colonial Empire
* 5: Matthew G. Stanard: Apr^andegrave^s nous, le d^andeacute^luge:
Belgium, Decolonization, and the Congo
* 6: Norrie MacQueen: Portugal
* 7: Alexey Miller: The Collapse of the Romanov Empire
* 8: Marc-William Palen: Empire by Imitation? US Economic Imperialism
within a British World System
* 9: Louise Conrad Young: Rethinking Empire: Lessons from Imperial and
Post Imperial Japan
* 10: Tehyun Ma: China
* Part II: Regional Perspectives
* 11: Joya Chatterji: Decolonization in South Asia: The Long View
* 12: Christopher Goscha: Global Wars and Decolonization in East and
South East Asia, 1927-1954
* 13: Sylvie Th^andeacute^nault: The End of Empire in the Maghreb: The
Common Heritage and Distinct Destinies of Morocco, Algeria, and
Tunisia
* 14: Frederick Cooper: Decolonization in Tropical Africa
* 15: Spencer Mawby: The Caribbean
* 16: James Mark and Quinn Slobodian: Eastern Europe
* 17: Robert S. G. Fletcher: Decolonization and the Arid World
* 18: Marieke Bloembergen: The Open Ends of the Dutch Empire and the
Indonesian Past: Sites, Scholarly Networks, and Moral Geographies of
Greater India across Decolonization
* Part III: Thematic Perspectives
* 19: Brad Simpson: Self-determination and Decolonization
* 20: Christopher J. Lee: Anti-colonialism
* 21: Andrew Thompson: Unravelling the Relationships between
Humanitarianism, Human Rights, and Decolonization: Time for a Radical
Rethink?
* 22: Piero Gleijeses: Decolonization and Cold War
* 23: Martin Thomas: Violence, Insurgency, and Ends of Empire
* 24: Barbara Bush: Nationalism, Development, and Welfare Colonialism:
Gender and the Dynamics of Decolonization
* 25: Miguel Bandeira Jer^andoacute^nimo: Repressive Developmentalism:
Idioms, Repertoires, and Trajectories in Late Colonialism
* 26: David Motadel: Islamic Revolutionaries and the End of Empire
* 27: Panikos Panayi: Refugees and the End of Empire
* Part IV: Legacies and Memories
* 28: Elizabeth Buettner: Postcolonial Migrations to Europe
* 29: Joseph Morgan Hodge: Beyond Dependency: North-South Relationships
in the Age of Development
* 30: Nicholas J. White: Imperial Business Interests, Decolonization
and Post- Colonial Diversification
* 31: Paul Cooke: Film and the End of Empire: Deconstructing and
Reconstructing Colonial Pasts and their Legacy in World Cinemas
* 32: Michael J. Parsons: Remnants of Empire
* 33: Charles Forsdick: Literature and Decolonization
* 34: Robert Aldrich: Apologies, Restitutions and Compensation: Making
Reparations for Colonialism