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The imperial Commonwealth

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The Imperial Commonwealth examines what empire meant to late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Australian settler colonists, how it seemed to entail special obligations for white settlers of ...
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  • 25 July 2023
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From the late 1800s to the early 1900s, Australian settler colonists mobilised their unique settler experiences to develop their own vision of what ‘empire’ was and could be. Reinterpreting their histories and attempting to divine their futures with a much heavier concentration on racialized visions of humanity, white Australian settlers came to believe that their whiteness as well as their Britishness qualified them for an equal voice in the running of Britain’s imperial project. Through asserting their case, many soon claimed that, as newly minted citizens of a progressive and exemplary Australian Commonwealth, white settlers such as themselves were actually better suited to the modern task of empire. Such a settler political cosmology with empire at its center ultimately led Australians to claim an empire of their own in the Pacific Islands, complete with its own, unique imperial governmentality.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Studies in Imperialism
Publication Date: 25 July 2023
ISBN: 9781526162755
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Australia & New Zealand, Colonialism and imperialism, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, HISTORY / Social History, Social and cultural history

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'The Imperial Commonwealth: Australia and the Project of Empire, 1867–1914 is to be welcomed as a new study delineating ways in which Australian nationalism and imperialism were, in fact, co-constitutive on either side of the turn of the twentieth century.'
Angela Woollacott, The Australian National University

'
The key contribution of The Imperial Commonwealth, alongside so compellingly stitching together a wide range of sources to represent public discourse, is in introducing a novel conceptual terminology. Thinking with a political cosmology of empire helps us consider imperial endurance and return, enriching our sense of the past in the present.'
Ben Silverstein, Journal of British Studies

Wm. Matthew Kennedy was recently a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow and is now a Research Associate at the University of Sussex

Introduction
1 Settler visions of imperial futures
2 Australians and famine in India
3 Empire and settler war-making
4 An Australian empire
5 Australian imperial governmentalities
Conclusion: citizens of empire
Index