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OverviewIn 1900 London was the greatest city on earth. This book examines its power and influence at the turn of the century and investigates its relationship with Britain's far-flung empire. Schneer concludes that it is the people of London who made their city and continually remade and reshaped it - as they continue to do today. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan SchneerPublisher: Yale University Press Imprint: Yale University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.740kg ISBN: 9780300076257ISBN 10: 0300076258 Pages: 346 Publication Date: 11 August 1999 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsA thorough, impressive tour of imperial London a century ago and of the dissenting voices that finally helped the sun set on this bastion of Eurocentrism. History professor Schneer (Georgia Institute of Technology) lets readers view the grimy streets, polished offices, and dockside warehouses of old London, as well as the hearts and minds of its elitist, racist denizens. History's greatest empire, controlling 400 million people, was governed from a metropolis of 6 million, with a vast port and financial center. Yet while the horns of African rhinos and skins of Canadian seals piled up alongside mineral and material wealth taken in tribute from the West Indies, South Africa, Australia, India, etc., Schneer produces those who defied the continual barrage of imperialist propaganda. Beginning with half a million Irish and swelled by eastern and central Europeans, Jews, and Asians, there were sufficient foreigners and people of color to bristle at the exotic, caged darkie and animal spectacles and to join liberals, unionists, and early feminists who fought the many injustices of Britannia. Schneer documents the battles of several individuals who saw beyond the profits of near-slave labor on Chinese railroads, Latin American sugarcane fields, African mines, Borneo robber plantations, and Ceylonese tea farms. Just as Ben Tillet's Stevedores Union took on London shipping, Lord George Hamilton did not believe that Indians should serve as cannon fodder as conflicts beside the Boer War flared. A cultural hero and pioneer of anthropological relativism was Mary Kingsley, who explored deepest Africa and shockingly concluded that blacks are different, not inferior. Schneer's masterful work reminds us how far we've come in our ongoing Copernican revolution to prove that' the globe doesn't revolve around white English-speaking men. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |