Nineteenth-­‐Century Theosophy Within its Global and Imperial Context (original) (raw)

Selling Empire: India in the Making of Britain and America, 1600 – 1830 by Jonathan Eacott (review)

William and Mary Quarterly, 2017

Come Malthus, and, in Ciceronian prose, Tell how a rutting population grows, Until the produce of the soil is spent, And brats expire for want of aliment. Then call on God his mercies to dispense, And prune the mass by war and pestilence. Arm with your sophistry oppression's hand, And interdict coition through the land…. Economists, who seek the world to thin, ''Tis you that teach this so named deadly sin. This, Malthusian, theory-much elaborated and of greater scholarly though not literary elegance-is the foundation of the Growth part of the Handbook. All in all, the Handbook of Cliometrics is a truly admirable presentation and explication of the state of the art of quantitative economic history.

Empire How Colonial India Made Modern Britain EPW offprint Dec 2010

EPW, Economic and Political Weekly, 2010

The view that colonialism did not have a major impact on the modernisation process of the colonising countries of Europe has not been critiqued adequately. Focusing primarily on the relationship between Britain and India, this paper argues that the economic development in Europe both in terms of the rise in living standards in human development and in the sense of the structural breakthrough with the rise of capitalism was closely linked with Europe’s relationship with the rest of the world from about the 15th century. The imperial connection between Britain and India contributed to British industrialisation and its emergence as a hegemonic power in the world, sustained Britain through her period of relative decline in global competition in the industrial sphere, enabled her financial supremacy in the world till the first world war to finally seeing her through the crisis years of the 20th century and up to the second world war.

The Origins of Empire British Overseas Enterprise to the Close of the Seventeenth Century (series: THE OXFORD HISTORY OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE), VOLUME I, Nicholas Canny

From the founding of the colonies in North America and the West Indies in the seventeenth century to the reversion of Hong Kong to China at the end of the twentieth, British imperialism was a catalyst for far-reaching change. British domination of indigenous peoples in North America, Asia, and Africa can now be seen more clearly as part of the larger and dynamic interaction of European and non-western societies. Though the subject remains ideologically charged, the passions aroused by British imperialism have so lessened that we are now better placed than ever to see the course of the Empire steadily and to see it whole. At this distance in time the Empire's legacy from earlier centuries can be assessed, in ethics and economics as well as politics, with greater discrimination. At the close of the twentieth century, the interpretation of the dissolution of the Empire can benefit from evolving perspectives on, for example, the end of the cold war. In still larger sweep, the Oxford History of the British Empire as a comprehensive study helps us to understand the end of the Empire in relation to its beginning, the meaning of British imperialism for the ruled as well as the rulers, and the significance of the British Empire as a theme in world history.

Empire: How Colonial India Made Modern Britain

Economic and Political Weekly, 2010

The view that colonialism did not have a major impact on the modernisation process of the colonising countries of Europe has not been critiqued adequately. Focusing primarily on the relationship between Britain and India, this paper argues that the economic development in Europe both in terms of the rise in living standards in human development and in the sense of the structural breakthrough with the rise of capitalism was closely linked with Europe's relationship with the rest of the world from about the 15th century. The imperial connection between Britain and India contributed to British industrialisation and its emergence as a hegemonic power in the world, sustained Britain through her period of relative decline in global competition in the industrial sphere, enabled her financial supremacy in the world till the first world war to finally seeing her through the crisis years of the 20th century and up to the second world war.