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6 - The Challenge of an Absent Peace in the French and British Empires after 1919

from Part I - Ordering Concepts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 May 2023

Peter Jackson
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
William Mulligan
Affiliation:
University College Dublin
Glenda Sluga
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence
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Summary

This chapter begins from the proposition that there was neither peace settlement, nor order, nor peace in the British and French empires after 1919. It focuses on those regions where British and French imperial territories and new imperial claims rubbed against one another with greatest friction. With typical acuity, historian John Mackenzie has warned against what he terms ‘the space station approach’ to the analysis of interwar imperialism. Viewed from a great distance, the First World War ‘becomes a sort of hinge or lever that articulates the events of the decades that went before and also those that came afterwards’. Mackenzie’s insight offers a starting point for this chapter’s analysis, which warns against regarding decolonisation deterministically, written as much in the failure of peacemaking as in the intensification of international rivalries in the 1930s. It thus draws the British and French empires back from their historical precipice, restoring a sense of contingency and according due importance to the short-term imperial expansions of the 1920s and the persistence of everyday violence and colonial rights abuses despite the new architecture of supranational oversight emerging from the peace settlement.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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