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Writing imperial histories
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31 August 2013

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, Colonialism and imperialism, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Diplomacy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, European history
A fitting tribute to Professor MacKenzie’s enormous contribution to modern imperial history. In the spirit of MacKenzie’s expansive vision, this collection works both as a summation of his career and also as a stimulus to further research.'
Saul Dubow, Professor of History, Sussex University
Coincident attention to genealogy and innovative potential is the hallmark of this collection.
Leonardi and Ward, among others, connect recent cutting-edge scholarship
with its still-active ancestor: John M. MacKenzie, the founding editor of the Studies in
Imperialism. The theme reappears subtly in Robert Aldrich’s study of gender in empire,
as he demonstrates that the series carved out a space for sexuality to be taken seriously
as a point of historical investigation, and, more pointedly, when Dane Kennedy traces
a clear path from early histories of exploration to the environmental histories now in
vogue in the academy. In fact, the dual vantage points make this collection much more
than a retrospective. While each of the essays elucidates the importance of past contributions
to the eld, the assembled authors also propose compelling future paths of inquiry.
Introduction – Andrew Thompson
1. The MacKenziean moment in retrospect (or how one hundred volumes bloomed) – Stuart Ward
2. The power of culture and the cultures of power: John MacKenzie and the study of imperialism – Cherry Leonardi
3. Sex matters: Sexuality and the writing of colonial history – Robert Aldrich
4. Exploration, the environment, and empire – Dane Kennedy
5. Spatial concepts and the historical geographies of British colonialism – Alan Lester
6. Policing the colonial crowd: Patterns of policing in the European empires during the Depression years – Martin Thomas
7. Whatever Happened to the Third British Empire?: Empire, nation redux – Mrinalini Sinha
8. Media, India and the Raj – Chandrika Kaul
9. Empires, diasporas and cultural circulation – Sunil Amrith
10. Decolonisation, space and power: Immigration, welfare and housing in Britain and France, 1945–74 – Jim House and Andrew Thompson
Afterword – John Mackenzie
Index