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020 _a9788125029823
082 _a941.08
_bGHO
245 _aDecentring empire:
_bBritain, India and the transcolonial world
260 _aHyderabsd
_bOrient Longman
_c2006
300 _axi, 406p.
_bhb.
440 _aNew Perspectives in South Asian History
_912265
500 _ahttps://www.orientblackswan.com/details?id=9788125029823
520 _aThis volume charts a new direction in the study of British imperialism, its impact on India and other colonial territories, and its influence in propelling the forces of globalisation. Moving beyond the standard model of a bilateral circuit between imperial centre and colonial periphery, it highlights instead the web of transcolonial and transnational networks that spread across and beyond the empire, operating both on its behalf and against its interests. It suggests that these networks worked in effect to decentre empire, shaping the multidimensional contours of the global modernity we contend with today. Decentring Empire brings together thirteen original essays by some of the leading scholars of British imperialism, their contributions offered in honour of Thomas R. Metcalf, the distinguished historian of colonial India. The essays range widely in scope, moving in time from the mid-eighteenth to the mid-twentieth century, in space from India to Ireland and Australia and elsewhere across the imperial map, and in topic from economic, political, and social to medical, legal, and cultural concerns. Taken together, they demonstrate the analytical richness of current scholarship on British colonialism in India and elsewhere and give fresh insights into its role in the making of the modern world. This is history at the cutting edge, an important contribution to the ongoing debate about empire and its consequences.
650 _aColonies - Administration
_912266
650 _aGreat Britain - India
_912267
650 _aPartition of India
_912268
700 _aGhosh, Durba (Editor)
_912269
700 _aKennedy, Dane (Editor)
_912270
942 _cG
999 _c10840
_d10840