The introduction and the accompanying spread of chapters in Empire, Migration and Identity offers a good exemplar of how the British World framework has adapted since its formulation more than ten years ago and where it stands today.
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The essays in this volume have been written by leading experts in their respective fields and bring together established scholars with a new generation of migration and transnational historians. Their work weaves together the ‘new’ imperial and the ‘new’ migration histories, and is essential reading for scholars and students interested in the interplay of migration within and between the local, regional, imperial, and transnational arenas. Furthermore, these essays set an important analytical benchmark for more integrated and comparative analyses of the range of migratory processes – free and coerced – which together impacted on the dynamics of power, forms of cultural circulation and making of ethnicities across a British imperial world.
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This volume brings together established scholars with a new generation of migration and transnational historians. Their work weaves together the ‘new’ imperial and the ‘new’ migration histories, and explores the interplay of migration within and between the local, regional, imperial, and transnational arenas.
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General Editor’s introductionIntroduction: Mapping the contours of the British World: Empire, identity and migration – Kent Fedorowich and Andrew S Thompson1. Malthus and the Uses of British Emigration – Eric Richards2. ‘Sprung from ourselves’: British interpretations of mid-nineteenth-century racial demographics – Kathrin Levitan3. Religious nationalism and clerical emigrants to Australia, 1828–1900 – Hilary M Carey4. Resistance and accommodation in Christian mission: Welsh Presbyterianism in Sylhet, Eastern Bengal, 1860–1940 – Aled Jones5. Asian migration and the British World, c.1850–c.1914 – Rachel Bright6. Righting the record? British child migration: the case of the Middlemore Homes, 1872–1972 – Michele Langfield7. Travelling colonist: British emigration and the construction of Anglo-Canadian privilege – Lisa Chilton8. ‘Dear Grace…love Maidie’: Interpreting a migrant’s letters from Australia, 1926–67 – Stephen Constantine9. Staying on or going ‘home’? Settlers’ decisions upon Zambian Independence – Jo Duffy11. ‘I’m a Citizen of the World’: Late-twentieth-century British emigration and global identities - the end of the ‘British World’? – A. James Hammerton12. Multiculturalism, decolonisation and immigration: Integration policy in Britain and France after the Second World War – Eleanor Passmore and Andrew S ThompsonIndex
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This groundbreaking study opens up new avenues of research into the history of imperial mobility and migration, while also engaging with the contemporary debates generated by immigration, globalisation and transnationalism. The chief aim of the volume is to introduce the reader to new and emerging research in the broad field of ‘imperial migration’, and, in so doing, to show how this ‘new’ migration scholarship is helping to deepen and enrich our understanding of the concept of a British World. Based upon far-reaching primary, secondary and oral-based research in Australia, Canada, France, Great Britain, the United States and Zambia, the volume provides a more integrated and comparative approach to histories of migration and mobility within a British imperial world. The key focal point is the analysis of different types of imperial migration, its shifting patterns and processes, its socio-economic bases, and the transfer of ideas, identities, racial constructs and investment capital along the various networks established by British migrants throughout the empire, both formal and informal. The essays also explore the tensions between the national and imperial, and the transnational and global. In doing so, they reflect on notions of ‘Britishness’ as contested forms of identity. What emerges is a subtle yet far-reaching investigation of competing forms of empire and nation-building. This book will appeal to undergraduates, postgraduates and scholars interested in British imperial and migration history. It also offers important insights for students interested in the comparative dynamics and overlapping vectors of global, transnational and British World history.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780719089565
Publisert
2013-05-31
Utgiver
Vendor
Manchester University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Om bidragsyterne
Kent Fedorowich is Reader in British Imperial and Commonwealth History at the University of the West of England, Bristol
Andrew S. Thompson is Professor of Modern History at the University of Exeter