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Editors’ Introduction: Networks in Imperial History

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posted on 2016-02-29, 15:49 authored by Gareth Curless, Stacey Hynd Hynd, Temilola Alanamu, Katherine Roscoe
Over the course of the last two decades imperial history has undergone a revival. Inspired by the “cultural turn” and the rise of global history, imperial historians have moved away from accounts that focus on a metropolitan center and a colonial periphery. Instead, they have advocated a decentered approach to the study of empire, which emphasizes the importance of paying close attention to the multiple networks of capital, goods, information, and people that existed within and between empires. While these networked treatments of empire have added much to our understanding of imperialism, the articles in this special issue argue that historians must remain sensitive to the specifics of the imperial experience, the limits of imperialism’s global reach, and the way in which imperialism could lead to new forms of exclusion and inequality.

History

Citation

Journal of World History, Special Issue 26 (4), The British World as World History: Networks in Imperial and Global History 2015, 26(4), pp. 705-732

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of World History

Publisher

University of Hawaii Press

issn

1045-6007

eissn

1527-8050

Acceptance date

2016-01-21

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2017-03-08

Publisher version

https://muse.jhu.edu/article/623739/summary

Language

en

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