Details
Colonial naval culture and British imperialism, 1922-67
Studies in Imperialism
129,99 € |
|
Verlag: | Manchester University Press |
Format: | EPUB |
Veröffentl.: | 01.11.2015 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9781526102348 |
Sprache: | englisch |
Anzahl Seiten: | 256 |
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Beschreibungen
Naval forces from fifteen colonial territories fought for the British Empire during the Second World War, providing an important new lens for understanding imperial power and colonial relations on the eve of decolonisation.
With sources from Britain, the Caribbean, Africa and Asia, this book examines the political, social and cultural impact of these forces; how they fortified British ‘prestige’ against rival imperialisms and colonial nationalisms; the importance of ‘men on the spot’, collaboration, ‘naval theatre’, and propaganda in mobilising colonial navalism; the role of naval training within the ‘civilising mission’ and colonial development; and how racial theory influenced naval recruitment, strategy and management, affecting imperial sentiment, ethnic relations, colonial identities, customs and order.
This book will appeal to imperial, maritime and regional historians, by broadening our understanding of navies as social and cultural institutions, where power was expressed through the ideas and relations they cultivated, as well as their guns.
With sources from Britain, the Caribbean, Africa and Asia, this book examines the political, social and cultural impact of these forces; how they fortified British ‘prestige’ against rival imperialisms and colonial nationalisms; the importance of ‘men on the spot’, collaboration, ‘naval theatre’, and propaganda in mobilising colonial navalism; the role of naval training within the ‘civilising mission’ and colonial development; and how racial theory influenced naval recruitment, strategy and management, affecting imperial sentiment, ethnic relations, colonial identities, customs and order.
This book will appeal to imperial, maritime and regional historians, by broadening our understanding of navies as social and cultural institutions, where power was expressed through the ideas and relations they cultivated, as well as their guns.
Naval forces from fifteen colonial territories fought for the British Empire during the Second World War, providing an important new lens for understanding imperial power and colonial relations on the eve of decolonisation.
Introduction: The origins of colonial naval development
Part I: The Caribbean
Trinidad
The Cayman Islands
Part II: East Africa
Kenya and Zanzibar, pre-1945
Post-war East Africa
Part III: Southeast Asia
The Straits Settlements and Malaya
Part IV: East Asia
Hong Kong, pre-1945
Post-war Hong Kong
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Part I: The Caribbean
Trinidad
The Cayman Islands
Part II: East Africa
Kenya and Zanzibar, pre-1945
Post-war East Africa
Part III: Southeast Asia
The Straits Settlements and Malaya
Part IV: East Asia
Hong Kong, pre-1945
Post-war Hong Kong
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Daniel Owen Spence is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Centre for Africa Studies at the University of the Free State
Between 1933 and 1941, fifteen indigenous naval forces were raised in Britain’s colonies, protectorates and mandate territories, and fought for the Empire during the Second World War. Though barely receiving a footnote within the existing historiography, if examined beyond naval strategy and more in relation to the cultural turn, they provide an important new lens for understanding imperial power and colonial relations at the twilight of the British Empire.
Through a transnational and comparative analysis of ‘official’ and ‘subaltern’ sources in the United Kingdom, the Caribbean, East Africa, East and Southeast Asia, this book examines for the first time the political, social and cultural impact of colonial naval forces. It explores their emergence in a climate of ‘imperial overstretch’ and geopolitical tensions, as bulwarks for preserving British ‘prestige’ against rival imperialisms and colonial nationalisms; the importance of ‘men on the spot’, ‘collaboration’, ‘naval theatre’, ‘invented traditions’, and propaganda in mobilising colonial ‘navalism’; the role of naval ‘paternalism’ and training within the ‘civilising mission’, and its social and economic ‘development’ of colonial ‘character’; and how racial ideology and discourses of power fostered a ‘seafaring race’ theory, influencing naval recruitment, strategy and management, and affecting imperial sentiment, ethnic relations, colonial identities, customs and order.
This book thus appeals to imperial, maritime and regional historians, and advances the cultural turn in those disciplines by broadening our understanding of navies as social and cultural institutions, where power was expressed as much in the ideas and relations they cultivated, as through the barrels of their guns.
Through a transnational and comparative analysis of ‘official’ and ‘subaltern’ sources in the United Kingdom, the Caribbean, East Africa, East and Southeast Asia, this book examines for the first time the political, social and cultural impact of colonial naval forces. It explores their emergence in a climate of ‘imperial overstretch’ and geopolitical tensions, as bulwarks for preserving British ‘prestige’ against rival imperialisms and colonial nationalisms; the importance of ‘men on the spot’, ‘collaboration’, ‘naval theatre’, ‘invented traditions’, and propaganda in mobilising colonial ‘navalism’; the role of naval ‘paternalism’ and training within the ‘civilising mission’, and its social and economic ‘development’ of colonial ‘character’; and how racial ideology and discourses of power fostered a ‘seafaring race’ theory, influencing naval recruitment, strategy and management, and affecting imperial sentiment, ethnic relations, colonial identities, customs and order.
This book thus appeals to imperial, maritime and regional historians, and advances the cultural turn in those disciplines by broadening our understanding of navies as social and cultural institutions, where power was expressed as much in the ideas and relations they cultivated, as through the barrels of their guns.