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Abstract
When European explorers went out into the world to open up trade routes and establish colonies, they brought back much more than silks and spices, cotton and tea. Inevitably, they came into contact with the peoples of other parts of the world and formed views of them occasionally admiring, more often hostile or contemptuous.
Using a stunning array of sources - missionaries' memoirs, the letters of diplomats' wives, explorers' diaries and the work of writers as diverse as Voltaire, Thackeray, Oliver Goldsmith and, of course, Kipling - Victor Kiernan teases out the full range of European attitudes to other peoples. Erudite, ironic and global in its scope, The Lords of Human Kind has been a major influence on a generation of historians and cultural critics and is a landmark in the history of Eurocentrism.
'The Lords of Human Kind remains an important resource for the history of racism and empire, and is a finely written book, with a frequently sardonic tone at the expense of self-revealing imperialists.'
Counterfire
'Victor Kiernan's classic work is a marvellous and erudite introduction to the cruelties and absurdities of the European empires and their interaction with the world beyond, the best single volume on the subject there is. With its entertaining style and encyclopaedic range, there is nothing quite like this book. It should be read by every teacher and by every schoolchild.'
Richard Gott, author of Britain's Empire: Resistance, Repression and Revolt
'The Lords of Human Kind provides an essential anti-Imperialist introduction to global history, and remains an indispensible work for understanding the modern world. The new edition is to be unreservedly welcomed.'
John Newsinger, Author of The Blood Never Dried: A People's History of the British Empire
'One of the rewards of my career as a historian is to have once suggested the idea of this book to Victor Kiernan, knowing that no other scholar had the brilliance and global range of learning to write it. It is still a marvellous book, fresh as on the day of first publication and ready for a new generation of readers.'
Eric Hobsbawm
'[Victor Kiernan is] that great Scottish historian of empire.'
Edward Said
'Absorbing.'
Shiva Naipaul, The Times
'A wry delight - brilliant, witty and humane'
Philip Toynbee, Observer
Victor Kiernan (1913-2009) ranks among Britain's most distinguished historians. After a fellowship at Trinity College, Cambridge, and a long period spent teaching in India, he joined the History Department at the University of Edinburgh, where he served as professor of modern history from 1970 until his retirement. Over the course of his life he authored such works as European Empires from Conquest to Collapse; The Duel in European History; Shakespeare: Poet and Citizen; Horace: Poetics and Politics and numerous others, as well as translating two volumes of Urdu poetry.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Front Cover | Front cover | ||
critique influence change | i | ||
More Critical Praise | iii | ||
About The Author\r | iv | ||
Title Page\r | v | ||
Copyright\r | vi | ||
Contents\r | vii | ||
Prefatory Note | ix | ||
A Tribute to Victor Kiernan | xi | ||
Foreword | xiii | ||
Preface to the First Edition | xxi | ||
Preface to the 1995 Edition | xxii | ||
1. Introduction | 1 | ||
The Oldest Europe and its Neighbours | 1 | ||
The Late Middle Ages: Contraction and Expansion | 8 | ||
The Shape of Modern Europe | 12 | ||
Europe and the World: The Seventeenth-Century Interval | 16 | ||
The Eighteenth-Century Outlook | 20 | ||
The Nineteenth Century: World Domination | 23 | ||
Notes | 30 | ||
2. India | 33 | ||
Conquest and the Spoils | 33 | ||
Impulses of Reform | 37 | ||
British Isolation: Splendid or Perilous? | 43 | ||
The Mutiny and its Effects | 47 | ||
Rebuilding an Alien Power | 53 | ||
Missionaries and Indian Religion | 64 | ||
Imperfect Sympathies | 70 | ||
Notes | 72 | ||
3. Other Colonies in Asia | 79 | ||
The British in Ceylon | 79 | ||
The British in Burma | 81 | ||
The British in Malaya | 85 | ||
The Netherlands East Indies | 91 | ||
French Indochina | 95 | ||
Russia in Asia | 101 | ||
Notes | 107 | ||
4. The Islamic World | 112 | ||
Turkey | 112 | ||
Tourists in the Near East | 119 | ||
Egypt and North Africa | 122 | ||
Persia | 126 | ||
The Oriental Scene: Despotism, Hubble-Bubble, Harem | 135 | ||
Christianity and Islam | 143 | ||
Notes | 145 | ||
5. The Far East | 152 | ||
China: An Illusion Fading | 152 | ||
Celestial Empire and Foreign Barbarian | 155 | ||
Foreign Residents in China | 161 | ||
Estimates of the Chinese Character | 165 | ||
Growth of Chinese Xenophobia | 171 | ||
The Yellow Peril | 177 | ||
Korea, Tibet, Siam | 179 | ||
The Opening of Japan | 181 | ||
Western Opinions of the Japanese | 187 | ||
Notes | 193 | ||
6. Africa | 203 | ||
Africans in Europe | 203 | ||
Africans in the Americas | 205 | ||
The Slave Trade and its Suppression | 210 | ||
Europeans in Western Africa | 214 | ||
Europeans in Eastern Africa | 221 | ||
Southern Africa: the Conflict of Races | 229 | ||
Belgians and Germans | 235 | ||
White Settlers | 238 | ||
The 'Child-Races' and their Reaction | 242 | ||
Notes | 247 | ||
7. The South Seas | 255 | ||
Free Love on Tahiti | 255 | ||
Decorum on the Lewchew Islands | 260 | ||
White Savages and Brown in the Pacific | 263 | ||
Missionary Influence and Western Rule | 267 | ||
New Zealand and the Maoris | 273 | ||
Australia and the Aborigines | 276 | ||
Notes | 282 | ||
8. Latin America | 286 | ||
Independence: White Man and Indian | 286 | ||
Imitation Europe or New World? | 294 | ||
Spanish America through European Eyes | 302 | ||
Brazil and the Democracy of Races | 308 | ||
Decadence and the Dictators | 312 | ||
Notes | 318 | ||
9. Conclusion | 325 | ||
Notes | 336 | ||
Index | 339 | ||
Back Cover | Back cover |