Empires of Violence: Massacre in a Revolutionary Age

Author:   Philip Dwyer (University of Newcastle, Australia.) ,  Barbara Alice Mann ,  Nigel Penn (University of Cape Town, South Africa) ,  Lyndall Ryan (University of Newcastle, Australia)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350538641


Pages:   344
Publication Date:   30 October 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Empires of Violence: Massacre in a Revolutionary Age


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Author:   Philip Dwyer (University of Newcastle, Australia.) ,  Barbara Alice Mann ,  Nigel Penn (University of Cape Town, South Africa) ,  Lyndall Ryan (University of Newcastle, Australia)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.660kg
ISBN:  

9781350538641


ISBN 10:   1350538647
Pages:   344
Publication Date:   30 October 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part I: Conquest and Empire in A Revolutionary Age 1. The Context: Conquest and Empire in a Revolutionary Age 2. Ways of Being, Ways of Seeing Part II: Resistance and Warfare 3. Resistance to Foreign Incursion 4. The Logic of Violence and Massacre on the Frontier Part III: Killing on the Frontier 5. The Xhosa and the Colonists in South Africa 6. ‘Determining to Exterminate Them’ in ‘Terror and Desolation’: Massacre in North America 7. Violence and Conquest during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 8. The Colony of New South Wales Conclusion: Reflections on Massacre and Colonial Violence in a Revolutionary Age Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

In the seminal online Colonial Frontier Massacres mapping project Lyndall Ryan and colleagues showed Australians the stark reality of the genocidal wars that founded their nation. In Empires of Violence, Ryan and co-authors show us we were part of a much broader system of colonial occupation of Indigenous lands that was underpinned by extreme violence as the singular, unrelenting method of subjugating resistance. Importantly, it interrogates the origins of the massacre as a tactic of warfare in Europe in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and how this translated to, and legitimised, state-sanctioned tactics of shock, awe and terror in the colonies. Empires of Violence is an important part of a new era of comparative colonial scholarship unravelling the blood stained ‘crimson thread of kinship’ and the Australian nation. * Stephen Gapps *


In the seminal online Colonial Frontier Massacres mapping project Lyndall Ryan and colleagues showed Australians the stark reality of the genocidal wars that founded their nation. In Empires of Violence, Ryan and co-authors show us we were part of a much broader system of colonial occupation of Indigenous lands that was underpinned by extreme violence as the singular, unrelenting method of subjugating resistance. Importantly, it interrogates the origins of the massacre as a tactic of warfare in Europe in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and how this translated to, and legitimised, state-sanctioned tactics of shock, awe and terror in the colonies. Empires of Violence is an important part of a new era of comparative colonial scholarship unravelling the blood stained ‘crimson thread of kinship’ and the Australian nation. * Stephen Gapps * ""An important book—well written and engaging to read. But also particularly timely joining a growing corpus of studies which are now reassessing the history of the great European empires which coincides with the dramatic shift of economic and political power from the West to South and South-East Asia. The four authors bring their local expertise together and are able to meld their studies of South Africa, Australia, America and the Napoleonic Empire together in an innovative and challenging way. They also juxtapose the extreme violence underpinning empire between 1780 and 1820 with what has also been seen as the height of the European enlightenment. * Henry Reynolds *


An important book- well written and engaging to read. But also particularly timely joining a growing corpus of studies which are now reassessing the history of the great European empires which coincides with the dramatic shift of economic and political power from the West to South and South-East Asia. The four authors bring their local expertise together and are able to meld their studies of South Africa, Australia, America and the Napoleonic Empire together in an innovative and challenging way. They also juxtapose the extreme violence underpinning empire between 1780 and 1820 with what has also been seen as the height of the European enlightenment. * Henry Reynolds, Professor, University of Tasmania, Australia * Violence transformed much of the world during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, not just within Europe or colonial spaces, but in both. This brilliant team probes this violence, exploring the French and British invasions of Europe, North America, Southern Africa and Australia to provide an interconnected and comparative history of the barbaric making of the modern world’ * Alan Lester, Professor, University of Sussex, UK * In the seminal online Colonial Frontier Massacres mapping project Lyndall Ryan and colleagues showed Australians the stark reality of the genocidal wars that founded their nation. In Empires of Violence, Ryan and co-authors show us we were part of a much broader system of colonial occupation of Indigenous lands that was underpinned by extreme violence as the singular, unrelenting method of subjugating resistance. Importantly, it interrogates the origins of the massacre as a tactic of warfare in Europe in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and how this translated to, and legitimised, state-sanctioned tactics of shock, awe and terror in the colonies. Empires of Violence is an important part of a new era of comparative colonial scholarship unravelling the blood stained ‘crimson thread of kinship’ and the Australian nation. * Stephen Gapps, President, The History Council of NSW, Australia * This innovative collaboration sheds light on the experiences of diverse peoples confronting imperial violence, illuminates transnational linkages, explores continuities in the psychology of mass killing, and conclusively demonstrates the inextricability of imperial conquest and extreme violence. This is a daring, important, heart-breaking study which demands a wide readership. * Elizabeth Elbourne, Professor, McGill University, Canada *


Author Information

Philip Dwyer is Emeritus Professor of History at University of Newcastle, Australia, and former Director of the Centre for the History of Violence. Barbara Alice Mann is Emeritus Professor of Humanities in the Jesup Scott Honors College at the University of Toledo, USA. Nigel Penn is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Lyndall Ryan was Emeritus Professor of History at University of Newcastle, Australia.

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