French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70

This article explores the role played by French Algeria in British imperial thinking during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. It argues that British commentators developed a remarkably stable vision of contemporary French colonial enterprise as unprogressive, incapable, authoritarian and...

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Autore principale: Middleton, A
Natura: Journal article
Lingua:English
Pubblicazione: Johns Hopkins University Press 2015
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author Middleton, A
author_facet Middleton, A
author_sort Middleton, A
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description This article explores the role played by French Algeria in British imperial thinking during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. It argues that British commentators developed a remarkably stable vision of contemporary French colonial enterprise as unprogressive, incapable, authoritarian and militaristic, as well as harmful to French domestic politics. The explanations they offered for the miscarriage of France’s colonial project in Algeria cast light on mid-nineteenth-century British imperial thinking, throwing into relief the qualities and policies which were believed to make modern British imperial rule uniquely successful. The article contends that analysis of other European countries’ colonial projects contributed importantly to a domestic political culture which defined itself in significant part through contrasts with the Continent.
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spelling oxford-uuid:76810a99-9517-4b35-bdc5-1660dc6a27dc2023-08-03T12:30:13ZFrench Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:76810a99-9517-4b35-bdc5-1660dc6a27dcEnglishSymplectic ElementsJohns Hopkins University Press2015Middleton, AThis article explores the role played by French Algeria in British imperial thinking during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. It argues that British commentators developed a remarkably stable vision of contemporary French colonial enterprise as unprogressive, incapable, authoritarian and militaristic, as well as harmful to French domestic politics. The explanations they offered for the miscarriage of France’s colonial project in Algeria cast light on mid-nineteenth-century British imperial thinking, throwing into relief the qualities and policies which were believed to make modern British imperial rule uniquely successful. The article contends that analysis of other European countries’ colonial projects contributed importantly to a domestic political culture which defined itself in significant part through contrasts with the Continent.
spellingShingle Middleton, A
French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title_full French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title_fullStr French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title_full_unstemmed French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title_short French Algeria in British Imperial Thought, 1830–70
title_sort french algeria in british imperial thought 1830 70
work_keys_str_mv AT middletona frenchalgeriainbritishimperialthought183070