Description
Book SynopsisThe Memories of Empire trilogy explores the complex and subterranean political currents that emerged in English society during the years of post-war decolonization. Just as the empire ended, when white princesses waltzed with new black heads of state in celebration of independence from colonial rule, the registers of racial whiteness in the home society quickened, and racial segregation - the colour bar - became ever more pronounced. Where are the connections to be located between the racial dimensions of decolonization overseas, and the colonial dimensions of race at home?Working back from the peak of Enoch Powell''s influence in 1968-1970, Memories of Empire seeks to illuminate the impact of decolonization on the political life of the old metropole. Decisive in this respect is the question of race, or more particularly the shifting dispositions of racial whiteness. The long colonial ordering of the idea of the white man, and of its various derivatives, constituted a powerful componen
Trade ReviewProfessor Bill Schwarz's book dramatically brings to life the frontier worlds of the British empire, not least the settler-colonial experiences of global Englishmen, and the ways in which these worlds and experiences came to redefine the meaning and purpose of empire itself. In The White Man's World, Schwarz brilliantly draws our awareness to the connections between British imperial thought and attendant imperial theories of what he terms 'racial whiteness'. * Dr Ian Sanjay Patel, LSE's Research for the World magazine *
Readers who have followed the struggle over the proper place of imperialism in British history these last three decades will know that Schwarz throws open many doors which have long been ajar but which, even now, await those willing to walk boldly yet thoughtfully through them ... The luxuriously long form of Schwarzs narrative is utterly inseparable from the force of his argument. Evidently, The White Mans World is the first of a trilogy; future volumes should be eagerly anticipated. * Aantoinette Burton, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, The American Historical Review *
Table of ContentsIntroduction: 'The Thing' ; Prologue: Reveries of Race, April 1968 ; 1. Ethnic Populism ; 2. Colony and Metropole ; 3. Remembering Race ; 4. The Romance of the Veld ; 5. Frontier Philosopher: Jan Christian Smuts ; 6. Defeated by Friends: The Central African Federation ; 7. Ian Smith: The Last White Man? ; Index