Sponsored
Imperial Nostalgia - by Peter Mitchell (Paperback)
Sponsored
About this item
Highlights
- A short, polemical study of the persistence of imperial nostalgia in modern British culture, politics, heritage and media.
- Author(s): Peter Mitchell
- 248 Pages
- History, Europe
Description
About the Book
A short, polemical study of the persistence of imperial nostalgia in modern British culture, politics, heritage and media.Book Synopsis
A short, polemical study of the persistence of imperial nostalgia in modern British culture, politics, heritage and media.From the Back Cover
'It can feel, at times, that the culture wars aimed at sowing division in Britain are going to tear us apart. Mitchell's fantastic new book, however, provides grounds for optimism and teaches us that the answer is to be informed. And there is no better, no more elegant, and no more erudite guide than Mitchell. An essential book for these disconcerting times.'
Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland: How Imperialism Has Shaped Modern Britain
Nesrine Malik, author of We Need New Stories: Challenging the Toxic Myths Behind Our Age of Discontent 'This is a brilliant account of Britain's ideological present, where the national past is mythologised into simplistic fables that benefit retrograde political forces. With forensic insight and in lively prose, Mitchell shows us how nostalgic fantasies of imperial rightness and whiteness are at the heart of a multitude of concocted cultural battles that seek to prevent a necessarily difficult reckoning with real history.'
Priyamvada Gopal, author of Insurgent Empire: Anticolonial Resistance and British Dissent To be British means to be haunted by empire - in our culture, in our politics, in the way we relate to ourselves and the world. Imperial nostalgia examines how our complicated relationship with our imperial past pervades life in contemporary Britain, and asks why we can't seem to let it go. From the free speech debate to the cultural politics of pandemic, from adventure fiction to the resurgence of race science, Mitchell explores how the ghosts and fantasies of empire haunt the present, and asks how we might come to a full and honest reckoning with our imperial past.
Review Quotes
One of The Guardian's best books of 2021.
'It can feel, at times, that the culture wars aimed at sowing division in Britain are going to tear us apart. Peter Mitchell's fantastic new book, however, provides grounds for optimism and teaches us that the answer is to be informed. And there is no better, no more elegant, and no more erudite guide than Mitchell. An essential book for these disconcerting times.'
Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland: How Imperialism Has Shaped Modern Britain
Nesrine Malik, Guardian columnist and author of We Need New Stories: Challenging the Toxic Myths Behind Our Age of Discontent 'This is a brilliant account of Britain's ideological present where the national past is mythologized into simplistic fables that benefit retrograde political forces. With forensic insight and in lively prose, Mitchell shows us how nostalgic fantasies of imperial rightness and whiteness are at the heart of a multitude of concocted cultural battles that seek to prevent a necessarily difficult reckoning with real history.'
Priyamvada Gopal, author of Insurgent Empire: Anticolonial Resistance and British Dissent
'Mitchell writes with eloquence, unsparing contempt for reactionary charlatanism, and a commitment to historical rigor that the objects of his most incisive criticism could learn from (but won't). All of which make this book one of the more perceptive and vital interventions that have emerged from an otherwise reductive and inadequate discourse surrounding Britain's imperial past.'
Jacobin
'Peter Mitchell takes this national fixation with an imagined past as a lens through which to understand some current political battles.'
Gargi Bhattacharyya, Red Pepper 'Mitchell's account of imperial nostalgia is deeply transnational. This is an important point, and it is not to be taken for granted: frequently, leftist critics of imperial nostalgia resort to a national exceptionalism of their own, lamenting the state of "normal island" and comparing it unfavourably to its European neighbours.'
Meghan Tinsley, Ethnic and Racial Studies
Additional product information and recommendations
Sponsored