Anticolonialism in British Politics: The Left and the End of Empire, 1918-1964This is the first full scholarly study of British anticolonialism. British anticolonialism was an offshoot of a massive global upsurge of sentiment which has dominated much of the history of this century. In this wide-ranging and important book, Stephen Howe surveys the attitudes and activities relating to colonial issues of British critics of Empire during the years of decolonisation. He also evaluates the changing ways in which, arising out of the experience of Empire and decolonisation, more general ideas about imperialism, nationalism, and under-development were developed during these years. His discussion encompasses both the left wing of the Labour Party and groups outside it: in the Communist Party, other independent left-wing groups, and single-issue campaigns. The book has considerable contemporary relevance, for British reactions to more recent events - the Falklands and Gulf Wars, race relations, South African apartheid - cannot fully be understood except in the context of the experience of decolonisation and the legacy of Empire. |
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Page 82
... perhaps fatally weaken , the British Empire . There are numerous clear reasons why this should have been so . Yet many would now argue , with John Gallagher , that ' In the short term , the impact of war considerably strengthened the ...
... perhaps fatally weaken , the British Empire . There are numerous clear reasons why this should have been so . Yet many would now argue , with John Gallagher , that ' In the short term , the impact of war considerably strengthened the ...
Page 305
... perhaps predictably , the benefits of ' socialist aid ' from the USSR and other Communist states . This was argued to be in every way different from the West's manipulative aid projects , selfless and non - exploitative . This was ...
... perhaps predictably , the benefits of ' socialist aid ' from the USSR and other Communist states . This was argued to be in every way different from the West's manipulative aid projects , selfless and non - exploitative . This was ...
Page 308
... perhaps rather its lack of them - over Rhodesia ; its stance on the Nigerian Civil War , on immigration , in support of the USA over Vietnam , and on many other aspects of relations between Britain and the under- developed world were to ...
... perhaps rather its lack of them - over Rhodesia ; its stance on the Nigerian Civil War , on immigration , in support of the USA over Vietnam , and on many other aspects of relations between Britain and the under- developed world were to ...
Contents
Socialism and Empire Before 1939 | 28 |
The impact of Empire on the British left | 40 |
The War Years 19361945 | 83 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
activities African anticolonial anticolonialist argued argument associated attitudes Attlee Benn papers Bevanite Britain British colonial British Communist British left British political British socialists C. L. R. James campaign capitalist Caribbean claim colonial affairs Colonial Development Colonial Freedom colonial issues Colonial Office colonial policy colonial questions Comintern Committee Commonwealth Communist Party conference Congress COPAI CPGB CPGB's Creech Jones critical debate decolonisation Driberg Eber economic Empire Fabian Fenner Brockway groups Guiana Hart Ibid imperialist independence India League influence International John John Eber Kenya Labour Government Labour left Labour MPs Labour Party leaders League Against Imperialism left-wing Lenin London Macmillan major Malaya Marxist Mau Mau MCF papers MCF's nationalist movements organisation Oxford University Press Padmore Palme Dutt pamphlet Pan-Africanism parliamentary party's post-war radical Report revolution revolutionary role Secretary self-government Seretse Seretse Khama social trade union Trotskyist West Indian whilst workers