Essays On Social Subjects. With a Memoir by Sir W. Stirling Maxwell

Essays On Social Subjects. With a Memoir by Sir W. Stirling Maxwell
Author: William Jones
Publisher: Legare Street Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-07-18
Genre:
ISBN: 9781020103483

A collection of insightful and thought-provoking essays on a wide range of social issues, ranging from poverty and education to war and politics. Written by prominent thinkers and reformers of the mid-19th century, including Charles Dickens and John Stuart Mill, these essays reflect the spirit of social and political reform that characterized the Victorian era. This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the "public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.

Empire of Neglect

Empire of Neglect
Author: Christopher Taylor
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2018-05-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 082237174X

Following the publication of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, nineteenth-century liberal economic thinkers insisted that a globally hegemonic Britain would profit only by abandoning the formal empire. British West Indians across the divides of race and class understood that, far from signaling an invitation to nationalist independence, this liberal economic discourse inaugurated a policy of imperial “neglect”—a way of ignoring the ties that obligated Britain to sustain the worlds of the empire’s distant fellow subjects. In Empire of Neglect Christopher Taylor examines this neglect’s cultural and literary ramifications, tracing how nineteenth-century British West Indians reoriented their affective, cultural, and political worlds toward the Americas as a response to the liberalization of the British Empire. Analyzing a wide array of sources, from plantation correspondence, political economy treatises, and novels to newspapers, socialist programs, and memoirs, Taylor shows how the Americas came to serve as a real and figurative site at which abandoned West Indians sought to imagine and invent postliberal forms of political subjecthood.