Britain and Decolonisation: The Retreat from Empire in the Post-War World: Making of 20th Century
Autor John Darwinen Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 noi 1988
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780333292563
ISBN-10: 0333292561
Pagini: 396
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:1988
Editura: Macmillan Education UK
Colecția Red Globe Press
Seria Making of 20th Century
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0333292561
Pagini: 396
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:1988
Editura: Macmillan Education UK
Colecția Red Globe Press
Seria Making of 20th Century
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Descriere
In
the
25
years
after
1945
Britain's
worldwide
empire
fell
to
piece
and
Britain
ceased
to
be
a
great
power.
Britain
abandoned
her
Indian
Empire,
gave
up
her
rule
over
the
African
and
Asian
Colonies,
surrendered
her
premier
position
in
the
Middle
East
and
withdrew
from
almost
all
the
bases
-
like
Aden
and
Singapore
-
which
had
once
been
the
'tollgates
and
barbicans
of
empire'.
At
the
same
time,
she
gave
up
the
long
tradition
of
aloofness
from
Europe
and
entered
the
EEC.
How
did
these
vast
changes
in
Britain's
world
position
come
about?
Was
Britain
driven
into
imperial
retreat
by
the
main
force
of
Afro-Asian
nationalism
and
superpower
pressure?
Were
the
colonial
transfers
of
power
a
noble
and
timely
recognition
or
the
political
maturity
of
the
colonial
peoples,
as
Harold
Macmillan
once
claimed?
Or
had
Britain
weighed
the
costs
and
benefits
of
empire
in
an
age
of
rapid
economic
and
international
change,
and
decided
that
the
colonial
game
was
not
worth
the
financial
candle?
If
so,
how
are
the
apparent
contradictions
in
British
policy
to
be
explained
-
the
dangerous
adventure
at
Suez,
the
extensive
commitments
East
of
Suez
not
terminated
until
1971
and
the
Falklands
war?
How
far
indeed
were
the
British
able
to
control
events
in
their
colonial
territories?
And
why
did
some
colonies
become
independent
so
much
earlier
than
others?
This book describes the aims and policies which the British tried to pursue in their last imperial age and examines the conflicting explanations put forward for Britain's part in decolonisation - that great reordering of world politics that has taken place since 1945.
This book describes the aims and policies which the British tried to pursue in their last imperial age and examines the conflicting explanations put forward for Britain's part in decolonisation - that great reordering of world politics that has taken place since 1945.
Cuprins
Preface.-
Maps.-
Decolonisation.-
War
and
Empire,
1939-45.-
The
Crisis
of
Empire,
1945-48.-
World
Power
or
Imperial
Decline?.-
Nationalism
and
Empire
in
the
1950s.-
Winds
of
Change.-
Winding
Up.-
Conclusion.-
Notes
and
References.-
Select
Bibliography.-
Index.
Notă biografică
JOHN
DARWIN
was
formerly
Lecturer
in
History
at
the
University
of
Reading
and
is
now
Beit
Lectuer
in
the
History
of
the
British
Commonwealth
and
Fellow
od
Nuffield
College,
Oxford.
He
is
the
author
ofBritain,
Egypt
and
the
Middle
East(1981).
Textul de pe ultima copertă
In
the
25
years
after
1945
Britain's
worldwide
empire
fell
to
piece
and
Britain
ceased
to
be
a
great
power.
Britain
abandoned
her
Indian
Empire,
gave
up
her
rule
over
the
African
and
Asian
Colonies,
surrendered
her
premier
position
in
the
Middle
East
and
withdrew
from
almost
all
the
bases
-
like
Aden
and
Singapore
-
which
had
once
been
the
'tollgates
and
barbicans
of
empire'.
At
the
same
time,
she
gave
up
the
long
tradition
of
aloofness
from
Europe
and
entered
the
EEC.
How
did
these
vast
changes
in
Britain's
world
position
come
about?
Was
Britain
driven
into
imperial
retreat
by
the
main
force
of
Afro-Asian
nationalism
and
superpower
pressure?
Were
the
colonial
transfers
of
power
a
noble
and
timely
recognition
or
the
political
maturity
of
the
colonial
peoples,
as
Harold
Macmillan
once
claimed?
Or
had
Britain
weighed
the
costs
and
benefits
of
empire
in
an
age
of
rapid
economic
and
international
change,
and
decided
that
the
colonial
game
was
not
worth
the
financial
candle?
If
so,
how
are
the
apparent
contradictions
in
British
policy
to
be
explained
-
the
dangerous
adventure
at
Suez,
the
extensive
commitments
East
of
Suez
not
terminated
until
1971
and
the
Falklands
war?
How
far
indeed
were
the
British
able
to
control
events
in
their
colonial
territories?
And
why
did
some
colonies
become
independent
so
much
earlier
than
others?
This book describes the aims and policies which the British tried to pursue in their last imperial age and examines the conflicting explanations put forward for Britain's part in decolonisation - that great reordering of world politics that has taken place since 1945.
This book describes the aims and policies which the British tried to pursue in their last imperial age and examines the conflicting explanations put forward for Britain's part in decolonisation - that great reordering of world politics that has taken place since 1945.