Empire in Question: Reading, Writing, and Teaching British Imperialism

Author:   Antoinette Burton ,  Mrinalini Sinha ,  Christopher Alan Bayly
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822349020


Pages:   277
Publication Date:   03 May 2011
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Empire in Question: Reading, Writing, and Teaching British Imperialism


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Overview

Featuring essays written by the influential historian Antoinette Burton since the mid-1990s, Empire in Question traces the development of a particular, contentious strand of modern British history, the ""new imperial history,"" through the eyes of a scholar who helped to shape the field. In her teaching and writing, Burton has insisted that the vectors of imperial power run in multiple directions, argued that race must be incorporated into history writing, and emphasized that gender and sexuality are critical dimensions of imperial history. Empire in Question includes Burton's groundbreaking critiques of British historiography, as well as essays in which she brings theory to bear on topics from Jane Eyre to nostalgia for colonial India. Burton's autobiographical introduction describes how her early encounters with feminist and postcolonial critique led to her convictions that we must ask who counts as a subject of imperial history, and that we should maintain a healthy skepticism regarding the claims to objectivity that shape much modern history writing. In the coda, she candidly reflects on shortcomings in her own thinking and in the new imperial history, and she argues that British history must be repositioned in relation to world history. Much of Burton's writing emerged from her teaching; Empire in Question is meant to engage students and teachers in debates about how to think about British imperialism in light of contemporary events.

Full Product Details

Author:   Antoinette Burton ,  Mrinalini Sinha ,  Christopher Alan Bayly
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9780822349020


ISBN 10:   0822349027
Pages:   277
Publication Date:   03 May 2011
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Foreword / Mrinalini Sinha xi Preface. A Note on the Logic of the Volume xvii Acknowledgments xix Introduction. Imperial Optics: Empire Histories, Interpretive Methods 1 Part I. Home and Away: Mapping Imperial Cultures 1. Rules of Thumb: British History and ""Imperial Culture"" in Nineteenth-Century and Twentieth-Century Britain (1994) 27 2. Who Needs the Nation? Interrogating ""British"" History (1997) 41 3. Thinking beyond the Boundaries: Empire, Feminism, and the Domains of History (2001) 56 4. Déjà Vu All over Again (2002) 68 5. When Was Britain? Nostalgia for the Nation at the End of the ""American Century"" (2003) 77 6. Archive Stories: Gender in the Making of Imperial and Colonial Histories (2004) 94 7. Gender, Colonialism, and Feminist Collaboration (2008, with Jean Allman) 106 Part II. Theory into Practice: Doing Critical Imperial History 8. Fearful Bodies into Disciplined Subjects: Pleasure, Romance, and the Family Drama of Colonial Reform in Mary Carpenter's Six Months in India (1995) 123 9. Contesting the Zenana: The Mission to Make ""Lady Doctors for India,"" 1874–75 (1996) 151 10. Recapturing Jane Eyre: Reflections on Historicizing the Colonial Encounter in Victorian Britain (1996) 174 11. From Child Bride to ""Hindoo Lady"": Rukhmabai and the Debate on Sexual Respectability of Imperial Britain (1998) 184 12. Tongues United: Lord Salisbury's ""Black Man"" and the Boundaries of Imperial Democracy (2000) 214 13. India Inc.?: Nostalgia, Memory, and the Empire of Things (2001) 241 14. New Narratives of Imperial Politics in the Nineteenth Century (2006) 257 Coda. Empire of/and the World?: The Limits of British Imperialism 15. Getting Outside of the Global: Repositioning British Imperialism in World History 275 Afterword / C. A. Bayly 293 Notes 303 Index 381"

Reviews

The Development of the new imperial history is considered in this book by a scholar who helped to shape the field. Antoinette Burton has insisted that the vectors of imperial power run in many directions and that race must be incorporated into history writing, and argued that gender and sexuality are critical dimensions of imperial history. This collection of essays includes her groundbreaking critiques of British historiography, as well as essays in which she views topics from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre to nostalgia for colonial India through the lens of theory, and a coda in which she candidly assesses shortcomings in her own thinking. - Times Higher Education, February 23rd 2012 No one has done more than Antoinette Burton to challenge the autonomies of national history, indeed the very 'certainty of the nation as an analytical category' itself. Inspired both by the archive's possibilities and the promise of feminist and postcolonial critique, she turns the ever-seductive sufficiencies of British history radically inside out. While brilliantly showing how and why the histories of nation and empire have to be written together, Empire in Question also documents the continuing transformations of the discipline of history since the 1980s, speaking eloquently to specialists across many different fields. - Geoff Eley, author of A Crooked Line: From Cultural History to the History of Society Antoinette Burton's body of work is central to the debates over national, imperial, and postcolonial histories. Empire in Question is a most welcome collection of her essays and required reading for anyone in this field. It contains classics, less well-known pieces, and new work. Characteristically, it is full of questions and challenges, both to herself and to her readers. We see a critical and imaginative historian at work, fully engaged both with the times in which she lives, and the times she evokes for us in the past. - Catherine Hall, University College London


Antoinette Burton's body of work is central to the debates over national, imperial, and postcolonial histories. Empire in Question is a most welcome collection of her essays, and required reading for anyone in this field. It contains classics, less well-known pieces, and new work. Characteristically, it is full of questions and challenges, both to herself and to her readers. We see a critical and imaginative historian at work, fully engaged both with the times in which she lives, and the times she evokes for us in the past. -Catherine Hall, Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History, University College London No one has done more than Antoinette Burton to challenge the autonomies of national history, indeed the very 'certainty of the nation as an analytical category' itself. Inspired both by the archive's possibilities and the promise of feminist and postcolonial critique, she turns the ever-seductive sufficiencies of British history radically inside out. While brilliantly showing how and why the histories of nation and empire have to be written together, Empire in Question also documents the continuing transformations of the discipline of history since the 1980s, speaking eloquently to specialists across many different fields. -Geoff Eley, author of A Crooked Line: From Cultural History to the History of Society Antoinette Burton's interrogation of empire has made reading, writing and teaching British imperialism a more stimulating and rewarding enterprise. -- Gavin Rand Journal of Victorian Culture Online Burton's new book should be read by everyone interested in the history of the British Empire over the last two centuries. Burton has been a leader, as Bayly comments in his afterword, in destabilizing the Whiggish, white man's model of imperial history. Her book importantly challenges the ways in which historians and the publics they influence continue to think about imperialism (both British and American) as well as about globalization, race, gender, and the practice and teaching of history. -- Patrick Brantlinger Review 19 The development of the 'new imperial history' is considered in this book by a scholar who helped to shape the field. Antoinette Burton has insisted that the vectors of imperial power run in many directions and that race must be incorporated into history writing, and argued that gender and sexuality are critical dimensions of imperial history. This collection of essays includes her groundbreaking critiques of British historiography, as well as essays in which she views topics from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre to nostalgia for colonial India through the lens of theory, and a coda in which she candidly assesses shortcomings in her own thinking. Times Higher Education This is history with politics and scholarship bound up together, where anything can become the material of the historian if viewed with a discerning eye, where the present and the past are constantly in dialogue, constantly up for question. -- Yasmin Khan History Workshop Journal Empire in Question demonstrates the vitality of cultural studies in capturing the relational dynamics of gender and race and their entwined framing of the lived spaces of imperial rule. -- Manu Goswami Journal of Modern History Antoinette Burton's collection of articles in the book, Empire in Question show her theoretical acumen and serve as theoretical harbinger for future aspiring imperial historians... This book is a treasure trove of information on imperial history and a necessary text for aspiring imperial historians, graduate students, and for those nostalgic for the Empire. It can only be hoped that such rethinking and researching of this nature would happen in the other areas of history of India as well. -- Lavanya Vemsani Itinerario [A]n important retrospective of new imperial history's development into a vital approach to British historical studies... Brought together as it is in this volume, Burton's work demonstrates the challenges, but more so the vital importance, of continuing to push ourselves and British studies past these historiographical barriers to a fuller view of the multiplicity of peoples and places that shape historical and contemporary global systems. -- Nicole M. Mares Journal of World History


Antoinette Burton's body of work is central to the debates over national, imperial, and postcolonial histories. Empire in Question is a most welcome collection of her essays, and required reading for anyone in this field. It contains classics, less well-known pieces, and new work. Characteristically, it is full of questions and challenges, both to herself and to her readers. We see a critical and imaginative historian at work, fully engaged both with the times in which she lives, and the times she evokes for us in the past. -Catherine Hall, Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History, University College London No one has done more than Antoinette Burton to challenge the autonomies of national history, indeed the very 'certainty of the nation as an analytical category' itself. Inspired both by the archive's possibilities and the promise of feminist and postcolonial critique, she turns the ever-seductive sufficiencies of British history radically inside out. While brilliantly showing how and why the histories of nation and empire have to be written together, Empire in Question also documents the continuing transformations of the discipline of history since the 1980s, speaking eloquently to specialists across many different fields. -Geoff Eley, author of A Crooked Line: From Cultural History to the History of Society Antoinette Burton's collection of articles in the book, Empire in Question show her theoretical acumen and serve as theoretical harbinger for future aspiring imperial historians... This book is a treasure trove of information on imperial history and a necessary text for aspiring imperial historians, graduate students, and for those nostalgic for the Empire. It can only be hoped that such rethinking and researching of this nature would happen in the other areas of history of India as well. -- Lavanya Vemsani Itinerario Antoinette Burton's interrogation of empire has made reading, writing and teaching British imperialism a more stimulating and rewarding enterprise. -- Gavin Rand Journal of Victorian Culture Online Burton's new book should be read by everyone interested in the history of the British Empire over the last two centuries. Burton has been a leader, as Bayly comments in his afterword, in destabilizing the Whiggish, white man's model of imperial history. Her book importantly challenges the ways in which historians and the publics they influence continue to think about imperialism (both British and American) as well as about globalization, race, gender, and the practice and teaching of history. -- Patrick Brantlinger Review 19 [A]n important retrospective of new imperial history's development into a vital approach to British historical studies... Brought together as it is in this volume, Burton's work demonstrates the challenges, but more so the vital importance, of continuing to push ourselves and British studies past these historiographical barriers to a fuller view of the multiplicity of peoples and places that shape historical and contemporary global systems. -- Nicole M. Mares Journal of World History The development of the 'new imperial history' is considered in this book by a scholar who helped to shape the field. Antoinette Burton has insisted that the vectors of imperial power run in many directions and that race must be incorporated into history writing, and argued that gender and sexuality are critical dimensions of imperial history. This collection of essays includes her groundbreaking critiques of British historiography, as well as essays in which she views topics from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre to nostalgia for colonial India through the lens of theory, and a coda in which she candidly assesses shortcomings in her own thinking. Times Higher Education This is history with politics and scholarship bound up together, where anything can become the material of the historian if viewed with a discerning eye, where the present and the past are constantly in dialogue, constantly up for question. -- Yasmin Khan History Workshop Journal Empire in Question demonstrates the vitality of cultural studies in capturing the relational dynamics of gender and race and their entwined framing of the lived spaces of imperial rule. -- Manu Goswami Journal of Modern History


No one has done more than Antoinette Burton to challenge the autonomies of national history, indeed the very 'certainty of the nation as an analytical category' itself. Inspired both by the archive's possibilities and the promise of feminist and postcolonial critique, she turns the ever-seductive sufficiencies of British history radically inside out. While brilliantly showing how and why the histories of nation and empire have to be written together, Empire in Question also documents the continuing transformations of the discipline of history since the 1980s, speaking eloquently to specialists across many different fields. Geoff Eley, author of A Crooked Line: From Cultural History to the History of Society Antoinette Burton's body of work is central to the debates over national, imperial, and postcolonial histories. Empire in Question is a most welcome collection of her essays and required reading for anyone in this field. It contains classics, less well-known pieces, and new work. Characteristically, it is full of questions and challenges, both to herself and to her readers. We see a critical and imaginative historian at work, fully engaged both with the times in which she lives, and the times she evokes for us in the past. Catherine Hall, University College London


Author Information

Antoinette Burton is Professor of History and Catherine C. and Bruce A. Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She has written and edited many books, including The Postcolonial Careers of Santha Rama Rau and After the Imperial Turn: Thinking with and through the Nation, both also published by Duke University Press.

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