The British Labour Movement and Imperialism

· ·
· Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Ebook
205
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

With Foreword by Tony Benn.

This edited collection explores the British labour movement's relationship with imperialism in the period 1800–1982 through nine inter-connected articles. Labour historians have tended to neglect the labour movement's interaction with imperialism, preferring to concentrate on industrial relations, internal factionalism, the Labour Party-trade union alliance, and economic policymaking. In order to redress the balance, this book takes a broad chronological overview of the subject and engages with key themes, ranging from trade union interaction with empire, and the influence of popular imperial culture, to post-war colonial development, and responses to post-colonialism. Taking stock both of the labour movement in a broader context and of new approaches to the history of British imperialism, the collection combines the work of leading authorities on labour history with recent scholarly research. By blending this combination of economic, social, political and cultural analyses, it makes a substantial contribution to the debates surrounding the legacy of imperialism and the evolution of the British labour movement.

The book will be of interest to academics, researchers, teachers and students of modern British political, social, economic and cultural history. It will also appeal to Labour Party members and labour movement activists.

About the author

Billy Frank is a senior lecturer and course leader in the School of Education and Social Science at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan). His doctoral thesis examined Britain’s colonial development policy in Central and Southern Africa in the trans-World War Two period with special reference to Barclays Bank. He is currently researching the lives and careers of empire bankers in the post-independence period.

Craig Horner is co-editor and book reviews editor of the Manchester Region History Review. His doctoral thesis was on the middling sorts of eighteenth-century Manchester; and he has published The Diary of Edmund Harrold, a Manchester Wigmaker (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008). He guest-edited the Manchester Region History Review special volume on early modern Manchester (2008) and is now researching early motoring and society in the United Kingdom prior to World War One.

David Stewart is BA (Hons.) History course leader at UCLan and, through his position as joint UCLan-People’s History Museum Research Fellow, has played an integral role in developing their institutional partnership. His research interests traverse twentieth-century political history, labour history and Scottish history. An innovative research monograph, based upon his PhD thesis, The Path to Devolution and Change: A Political History of Scotland under Margaret Thatcher, was published by I. B. Tauris in 2009.

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