From The Imaginative Conservative
By Daniel M. Bring
Imperial Legacies: The British Empire Around the World, by Jeremy Black (216 pages, Encounter Books, 2019)
In early 2018, a group of students from London’s School of African and Oriental Studies picketed an unassuming café near Finsbury Park for honoring Winston Churchill with some décor and a breakfast special named after him. The students chanted “Churchill was a racist” and demanded that all traces of him be erased from the establishment. The café’s proprietor defied the mob and later declared, “If you cannot celebrate Churchill, you cannot celebrate anyone.”
Jeremy Black seeks to defend the British Empire as a whole from this kind of historical erasure in his newest effort, Imperial Legacies.
Dr. Black, Established Professor of History at the University of
Exeter, has written over ninety books on topics including naval warfare,
the art of fortification, Shakespeare, and James Bond. His latest is
timely, personal, and richly detailed, applying his scholarly faculties
to popular historiography in a manner that many professors avoid.
Dr. Black does not undertake a
comprehensive apologetic for the British Empire. Instead, he offers a
more limited defense against the revisionist and condemnatory
interpretations that have become standard in both academic and popular
discussion. In its early chapters, Imperial Legacies promises
to show how disapproval of America today replicates the postcolonial
condemnation of Britain. The book does not quite fulfill this line of
argument, which vanishes as Dr. Black’s focus on the British Empire
becomes much more acute. Instead of refining the comparison to America,
however, Dr. Black accomplishes something much more ambitious: he
systematically debunks the ideologies of “decolonization” and
postcolonial resentment and shows the harm of dismissing British history
as a story of monolithic oppression.
What Dr. Black shows is that the British
Empire was no worse than most other empires—and better than many. Even
if it was a colonial master, Britain was a far preferable master to the
Nazis and the Soviets. Nothing is gained by using modern standards to
condemn the British Empire as one of the world’s great villains.
Instead, as Dr. Black argues, this anti-historical damnation comes at a
real cost to the integrity of historians, the defense of Western
civilization, and the collective understanding of current events.
One problem with moralistic critiques of
the British Empire is that they ignore basic variables of great power
politics, such as the distinction between the aggressor and the
defender. As Dr. Black points out, “British imperialism was in large
part imperialism directed against other empires.” Who was oppressing
whom when Britain and France invaded Russian Crimea to defend the
Ottomans?
Another problem results from the conflation of history and political theory. Definitions for terms such as empire, imperialism, and colonialism
come in and out of favor and vary across historical schools and time
periods. Marxist historiographers, in particular, have long been wont to
keep all such classifications within the realm of economics. In their
account, imperialism is a part of the cycle of exploitation between
rulers and workers. Conveniently, this narrative long enabled communist
ideologues to tar American actions in Central America as imperialistic
while excusing Soviet incursions into Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and
Afghanistan.
Finally, the broader application of
postcolonial ideology—the artificial distinction between a European
colonial empire and its indigenous successors—gives rise to a ludicrous
double standard. The use of force by successor states like Zimbabwe and
Pakistan is only acknowledged inasmuch as it can be attributed to the
“legacy of the end of empire,” as former UK foreign secretary Jack Straw
said in 2002. Large, multicultural empires take the blame for
postcolonial ethnic cleansing. Meanwhile, the ethno-nationalists who
caused their collapse get off without criticism.
Dr. Black argues that constantly
changing criteria make analysis impossible. “Once imperialism includes
economic factors, informal empire, and soft power . . . ” he asserts,
“there cannot be any close, let alone precise definition.” And without a
precise definition of imperialism, it is impossible to understand the
history of empire—let alone provide a moral evaluation. Critics and
defenders alike must ensure that they are talking about the same
phenomena.
Consider the Indian subcontinent, where
wars of empire raged long before the British East India Company arrived
and took control in 1757. Before the British, the Mughals were the only
power to dominate the entire region, having done so by ruthless force
and for only a brief period of time. Any political power would have
struggled to maintain order over such a vast area and all its enduring
ethno-religious divides. Britain managed to do so, developing
infrastructure and a robust civil service, though not without a number
of atrocities.
These atrocities, in turn, have become a
crucial part of an independent India’s national mythmaking. Much has
been made of incidental British brutality, exemplified by the Amritsar
massacre (depicted in Richard Attenborough’s 1982 film, Gandhi).
Much less has been said about the ways in which India’s Hindu
nationalists, like the ruling BJP, have used anti-British sentiment to
build their political support while oppressing ethno-religious
minorities of Muslims and Sikhs. Though they do not neglect the Amritsar
victims, Hindu leaders rarely memorialize the thousands of Sikhs killed
by Hindus in the riots of 1984.
Similar patterns of anti-British
ideology fostering contrived nationalistic sentiment have occurred in
other former possessions of the Crown. Ireland’s affected Gaelic
identity came at a real cost to its Protestant minority and inspired a
reckless foreign policy that, under Éamon de Valera, aligned Ireland so
closely to Nazi Germany that Churchill considered invasion.
Historically, the British Empire could serve as the villain upon which
all a nation’s ills could be blamed. One can easily recall other
examples of such expedient criticism from the revolutionary,
postcolonial states of British Africa and Asia.
In the United States, the alleged
tyranny of King George III and the British is still a political
motivator for factions like the modern Tea Party movement. The
Nationalist and Communist Chinese have used the Opium Wars, perpetrated
by the British against a decaying Qing dynasty, to explain the necessity
for revolution. Amusingly, Dr. Black notes how Chinese and American
films both tend to depict villains, especially in period pieces, as
British or speaking British-accented English.
Using the revisionist double standard,
critics revile the erstwhile settler colonies of Australia, Canada, and
New Zealand, which are now among the world’s most prosperous nations.
Tariana Turia, New Zealand’s associate minister of Maori Affairs, spoke
in 2000 of a (fictive) “Maori holocaust” perpetrated by the British
colonists. Mrs. Turia, it seems, was willfully ignorant of the Maori’s
own history as a violent, expansionist empire throughout Oceania since
their own arrival circa the thirteenth century. In Australia, the stance
on the treatment of the Aboriginals is one of official guilt. Even the
country’s World War I veterans must be shunned for their complicity in
empire, despite the role of that conflict in promoting Australia’s
independent national identity.
The British Empire thus seems a curse
not soon to be lifted from popular historical and political imagination.
Dr. Black dismisses the general concept of “Imperial amnesia”—the idea
that the crimes of the British Empire are often overlooked. Instead, he
shows that there is only amnesia about the benefits and virtues of
empire, however significant or paltry they may have been. Almost without
fail, Britain’s erstwhile colonies denounce it as the perpetrator of
global evil in terms lacking any depth or nuance. This global abdication
of historical accuracy has long distorted public opinion within the UK
itself. Anti-Imperial sentiment demoralized generations of British
leaders and culminated in the “bolt from Empire” that started under
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in the late 1950s.
As William Faulkner said of the American
South, Dr. Black seems to say of the British Empire: “The past is never
dead. It’s not even past.” The toxic remembrance of only the worst of
empire has poisoned the British state, mired at the time of writing in a
crisis concerning its exit from the European Union. Britain appears to
lack the will even to establish its sovereignty, instead
compartmentalizing its existence either within a European community or a
“Special Relationship” with America. That little island nation that
once projected order unto the world looks about to be submerged beneath
the waves.
Imperial Legacies is a spirited
polemic that exposes the misunderstandings, cynical disregard, and
hypocrisy surrounding the history of the British Empire. Dr. Black’s
work is a clinic for scholars in all fields, reminding us to set aside
ideology, focus on the facts, and recognize nuances. Having disappeared
from the map, the British Empire should survive in memory—not only for
its flaws but also for its virtues.
Republished with gracious permission from Modern Age (August 2019).
The featured image is “Neptune Resigning to Britannia the Empire of the Sea” and is in the Public Domain, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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