The End of Empires and a World Remade - Professor Martin Thomas

The End of Empires and a World Remade

A Global History of Decolonization
Buch | Hardcover
672 Seiten
2024
Princeton University Press (Verlag)
978-0-691-19092-1 (ISBN)
43,65 inkl. MwSt
A capacious history of decolonization, from the decline of empires to the era of globalization

Empires, until recently, were everywhere. They shaped borders, stirred conflicts, and set the terms of international politics. With the collapse of empire came a fundamental reorganization of our world. Decolonization unfolded across territories as well as within them. Its struggles became internationalized and transnational, as much global campaigns of moral disarmament against colonial injustice as local contests of arms. In this expansive history, Martin Thomas tells the story of decolonization and its intrinsic link to globalization. He traces the connections between these two transformative processes: the end of formal empire and the acceleration of global integration, market reorganization, cultural exchange, and migration.

The End of Empires and a World Remade shows how profoundly decolonization shaped the process of globalization in the wake of empire collapse. In the second half of the twentieth century, decolonization catalyzed new international coalitions; it triggered partitions and wars; and it reshaped North-South dynamics. Globalization promised the decolonized greater access to essential resources, to wider networks of influence, and to worldwide audiences, but its neoliberal variant has reinforced economic inequalities and imperial forms of political and cultural influences. In surveying these two codependent histories across the world, from Latin America to Asia, Thomas explains why the deck was so heavily stacked against newly independent nations.

Decolonization stands alongside the great world wars as the most transformative event of twentieth-century history. In The End of Empires and a World Remade, Thomas offers a masterful analysis of the greatest process of state-making (and empire-unmaking) in modern history.

Martin Thomas is professor of imperial history and director of the Centre for Histories of Violence and Conflict at the University of Exeter. A fellow of the Leverhulme Trust and the Independent Social Research Foundation, he is the author of Violence and Colonial Order: Police, Workers and Protest in the European Colonial Empires, 1918–1940; Fight or Flight: Britain, France, and the Roads from Empire; and other books.

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 11 Maps
Verlagsort New Jersey
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 454 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Neuzeit (bis 1918)
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-691-19092-5 / 0691190925
ISBN-13 978-0-691-19092-1 / 9780691190921
Zustand Neuware
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