After the British World



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1Contact Details: Dr Rachel Bright, History

School of Humanities

Keele University

Keele

Staffordshire

ST5 5BG

r.k.bright@keele.ac.uk
Dr Andrew Dilley

Department of History

University of Aberdeen

Crombie Annex

Meston Walk

Old Aberdeen

Scotland

AB24 3FX
1 For challenges to the nation state and transnational history, A. Burton, 'Who needs the nation? Interrogating “British” history', Journal of Historical Sociology, 10 (1997), pp. 227-248; A.G. Hopkins, 'Back to the future: from national history to imperial history', Past and Present, 164 (1999), pp. 198-243; P. Clavin, 'Defining transnationalism', Contemporary European History, 14 (2005), pp. 421-439; L. Briggs, G. McCormick and J.T. Way, 'Transnationalism: a category of analysis', American Quarterly, 60 (2008), pp. 625-648. For global history, see C.A. Bayly, The birth of the modern world, 1780-1914: global connections and comparisons (Oxford, 2004); P. O'Brien, 'Historiographical traditions and modern imperatives for the restoration of global history', Journal of Global History, 1 (2006), pp. 3-39; A.G. Hopkins, ed., Globalization in world history (London, 2002); idem, ed., Global history: interactions between the universal and the local (Basingstoke, 2006); G. Eley, 'Historicizing the global, politicizing capital: giving the present a name ', History Workshop Journal, 63 (2007), pp. 154-188.




2 B. Bailyn, 'Preface', in D. Armitage and M. J. Braddick, eds., The British Atlantic World, 1500-1800 (Basingstoke, 2002), p. xix.

3 On the Atlantic world, see D. Armitage and M.J. Braddick, eds., The British atlantic world, 1500-1800 (Basingstoke, 2002); J.P. Greene and P.D. Morgan, eds., Atlantic history: a critical appraisal (Oxford, 2009). On the Indian Ocean, see M.N. Pearson, The world of the Indian ocean, 1500-1800: studies in economic, social and cultural history (Aldershot, 2005); E.A. Alpers, The Indian ocean in world history (Oxford 2014); S.A. Sivasundaram, Islanded: Britain, Sri Lanka, and the bounds of an Indian ocean colony (Chicago, IL, 2013). On the Pacific, see D.O. Flynn, L. Frost and A.J.H. Latham, eds., Pacific centuries: Pacific and Pacific rim economic history since the 16th century (London, 1999); D. Armitage and A. Bashford, eds., Pacific histories: ocean, land, people (Basingstoke, 2014).

4 For critiques of Atlantic history, see Chaplin and Coclanis in Greene and Morgan, eds., Atlantic history.

5 J.L. Abu-Lughod, Before european hegemony: The world system a. D. 1250-1350 (New York ; Oxford, 1989); A.K. Bennison, 'Muslim universalism and western globalization', in A.G. Hopkins, ed., Globalization in world history (London, 2002).

6 Greene and Morgan, eds., Atlantic history; T. Falola and K.D. Roberts, eds., The Atlantic world: 1450-2000 (Bloomington, Ind., 2008); J.a. Weaver, The red Atlantic: American indigenes and the making of the modern world, 1000-1927. Paul Gilroy’s influential The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness (Cambridge, Mass., 1993) has a complex relationship with Atlantic History. See D.B. Chambers, 'The black Atlantic: theory, method, and practice', in T. Falola and K.D. Roberts, eds., The Atlantic world: 1450-2000 (Bloomington, Ind., 2008).

7 Key works are cited throughout.

8 P.A. Buckner and R.D. Francis, 'Introduction', in P.A. Buckner and R.D. Francis, eds., Rediscovering the British world (Calgary, 2005), p. 17. See also P. Buckner and C. Bridge, 'Re-inventing the British world', The Round Table, 92 (2003), pp. 77-88.

9 P.A. Buckner, 'Was there a "British" empire? The Oxford history of the British empire from a Canadian perspective.', Acadiensis, 32 (2002), pp. 110-28.

10 For example, W.R. Louis, ed., Imperialism: the Robinson and Gallagher controversy (New York, 1976). However, the dominions became important in the gentlemanly capitalism debate. See essays by Kubicek, Davis, and Cain and Hopkins in R.E. Dumett, e.d., Gentlemanly capitalism and British imperialism: the new debate on empire (London, 1999).

11 D. Kennedy, 'Imperial history and post-colonial theory', Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 24 (1996); T. Ballantyne, 'Colonial knowledge', in S.E. Stockwell, ed., The British empire: themes and perspectives (Oxford, 2008); K. Wilson, A new imperial history: culture, identity, and modernity in Britain and the empire, 1660-1840 (Cambridge, 2004).

12 Hopkins, 'Back to the future', pp. 216-8. P. Buckner, 'Whatever happened to the British empire', Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, 4 (1993), pp. 3-32.

13 D. Denoon, Settler capitalism: The dynamics of dependent development in the southern hemisphere (Oxford, 1983); D.C.M. Platt and G. Di Tella, eds., Argentina, Australia and Canada: studies in comparative development 1870-1965 (London, 1985).

14 D. Schreuder and S. Ward, 'Introduction: What became of Australia's empire?', in D. idem., eds., Australia's empire (Oxford, 2008), p. 11. See also P. Buckner, 'Introduction', in idem. ed., Canada and the British empire (Oxford, 2008), pp. 12-13.

15 Buckner and Bridge, 'Re-inventing the British world'; Buckner and Francis, 'Introduction', p. 7.

16 C. Bridge and K. Fedorowich, 'Mapping the British world', in idem., eds., The British world: Diaspora, culture, and identity (London, 2003), p. 1

17 J.G.A. Pocock, 'The new British history in Atlantic perspective: An antipodean commentary', American Historical Review, 104 (1999), pp. 490-500 at p. 500.

18 Quoted in Buckner and Bridge, 'Re-inventing the British world', p. 81.

19 Bridge and Fedorowich, 'The British world', p. 6.

20 Diaspora is frequently used in the British world literature as a synonym for migration. Stephen Constantine has offered a thoughtful justification. See S. Constantine, 'British emigration to the empire-commonwealth since 1880: From overseas settlement to diaspora?' in Bridge and Fedorwich, The British world. See also Dr Esme Cleall, ‘Review of Empire, migration and identity in the British world’, Reviews in History, 1597 (2016), DOI: 10.14296/RiH/2014/1597.

21 Buckner and Francis, 'Introduction', p. 18.

22 L. Colley, Britons: Forging the nation, 1707-1837 (London, 1992); idem., 'Britishness and otherness: an argument', Journal of British Studies, 31 (1992), pp. 309-329. On a ‘four nations’ approach to British imperial history, see J.M. MacKenzie, 'Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and English worlds? The historiography of a four-nations approach to the British empire', in C. Hall and K. McClelland, eds., Race, nation and empire: making histories, 1750 to the present (Manchester, 2010). On Irish and Scottish ethnicity in Australia, see L. Proudfoot and D. Hall, Imperial spaces: placing the Irish and the Scots in colonial Australia (Manchester, 2011). British world conference organisers also sought out keynote papers from leading figures in the new imperial history, which built on postcolonial influences to place new British history in global context. Nonetheless an uneasy relationship has existed the relationship between new Imperial history and with its post-colonial emphasis on the construction of difference, and the British world’s with its soft focus on sameness. Only Hall has published under the British world banner, but to closely equate the British world with British imperium. See C. Hall, 'What did a British world mean to the British', in Buckner and Francis, eds., Rediscovering the British world. See also K. Pickles, 'The obvious and the awkward: post-colonialism and the British world', New Zealand Journal of History, 45 (2011), pp. 85-101.

23 A. Lester,

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