Imperial nostalgia: How the British conquered themselves

Imperial nostalgia: How the British conquered themselves

by Peter Mitchell
Imperial nostalgia: How the British conquered themselves

Imperial nostalgia: How the British conquered themselves

by Peter Mitchell

Paperback

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Overview

A strong emotional attachment to the memory of empire runs deep in British culture. In recent years, that memory has become a battleground in a long-drawn ideological war, inflecting debates on race, class, gender, culture, the UK’s future and its place in the world. This provocative and passionate book surveys the scene of the imperial memory wars in contemporary Britain, exploring how the myths that structure our views of empire came to be, and how they inform the present. Taking in such diverse subjects as Rory Stewart and inter-war adventure fiction, man’s facial hair and Kipling, the Alt-right and the Red Wall, Imperial Nostalgia asks how our relationship with our national past has gone wrong, and how it might be improved.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526146205
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 07/12/2021
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.08(w) x 7.80(h) x 0.57(d)

About the Author

Peter Mitchell is a writer and historian

Table of Contents

Introduction
1 Associative magic: nostalgic time and the revolt against mourning
2 Inventing the tradition: how nostalgia made an empire
3 Sovereign bodies: Britain’s imperial present
4 ‘The best and most perfect virtue’: empire, race and free speech in the battle for the university
5 The adventures of the Imperial Wonder Boy: Rory Stewart and the fantasy of innocence
6 ‘Degraded underfoot perverse creatures’: empire and the languages of class
Conclusion: escaping the empire

Further reading
Bibliography
Index

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