Manchester Studies in Imperialism
With over 140 titles, published over two decades, Manchester Studies in Imperialism is firmly positioned at the forefront of the study of imperial history.
The MSI collection offers a rich source of scholarship on propaganda, social control and migration, cultural encounters between the coloniser and colonised, the circulation of power through the production and organisation of colonial knowledge, and the construction of identity both at the heart and on the margins of empire.
Series Editors: John M. MacKenzie and Andrew S. Thompson
Please visit http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/manchester-studies-imperialism for more details about MSI and information on how to access the collection.
143 Publications for Manchester Studies in Imperialism:
- Acts of supremacy
- Air empire
- Air power and colonial control
- An Anglican British world
- An Irish empire'?
- Arctic in the British imagination 1818-1914, The
- Asia in Western fiction
- At Duty's Call'
- At the end of the line
- Beastly encounters of the Raj
- better class' of Indians, The
- Beyond the state
- Borders and conflict in South Asia
- Britain and the formation of the Gulf States
- Britain in China
- Britannia's children
- British culture and the end of empire
- British imperialism in Cyprus, 1878-1915
- Child, nation, race and empire
- Chocolate, women and empire
- Citizenship, nation, empire
- Colonial connections, 1815-45
- Colonial frontiers
- Colonial masculinity
- Colonial naval culture and British imperialism, 1922-67
- colonisation of time, The
- Conflict, Politics and Proselytism
- Conquering nature in Spain and its empire, 1750-1850
- Country houses and the British Empire, 1700-1930
- Crowns and colonies
- cultural construction of the British world, The
- Cultural identities and the aesthetics of Britishness
- Cultures and caricatures of British imperial aviation
- Cultures of decolonisation
- Curating empire
- Developing Africa
- Emigrant homecomings
- Emigrants and empire
- Emigration from Scotland between the wars
- Empire and nation-building in the Caribbean
- Empire and sexuality
- Empire careers
- empire in one city?, The
- Empire, migration and identity in the British World
- empire of nature, The
- Empire of scholars
- Ending British rule in Africa
- Engendering whiteness
- Engines for empire
- Ephemeral vistas
- Equal subjects, unequal rights
- European Empires and the People
- Exhibiting the Empire
- Exporting empire
- Female imperialism and national identity
- Flagships of imperialism
- French colonial Dakar
- French empire at War, 1940-1945, The
- French empire between the wars, The
- From Jack Tar to Union Jack
- Garden cities and colonial planning
- Gender and imperialism
- Gender, crime and empire
- Gendered transactions
- Genteel women
- Guardians of Empire
- harem, slavery and British imperial culture, The
- Heroic imperialists in Africa
- History, heritage, and colonialism
- Hong Kong and British culture, 1945-97
- Images of the army
- Imperial cities
- Imperial citizenship
- Imperial expectations and realities
- imperial game, The
- Imperial medicine and indigenous societies
- Imperial persuaders
- Imperial spaces
- Imperialism and juvenile literature
- Imperialism and music
- Imperialism and Popular Culture
- Imperialism and the natural world
- Imperium of the soul
- In the club
- Insanity, identity and empire
- Ireland, India and empire
- Jute and empire
- Knowledge, mediation and empire
- Labour and the politics of Empire
- language of empire, The
- Law, history, colonialism
- Learning femininity in colonial India, 1820-1932
- Livingstone's 'lives'
- Madness and marginality
- Married to the empire
- Martial races
- Masters and servants
- Materials and medicine
- Migrant races
- Missionaries and their medicine
- Missionary families
- Mistress of everything
- Museums and empire
- New frontiers
- New Zealand's empire
- Oceania under steam
- Ordering Africa
- other empire, The
- Policing and decolonisation
- Policing the empire
- Popular imperialism and the military, 1850-1950
- Propaganda and Empire
- Race and empire
- relic state, The
- Reporting the Raj
- Representing Africa
- Rethinking settler colonialism
- Revolution and empire
- Royal tourists, colonial subjects and the making of a British world, 1860-1911
- Science and society in southern Africa
- Science, race relations and resistance
- Scotland, empire and decolonisation in the twentieth century
- Scotland, the Caribbean and the Atlantic world, 1750-1820
- Scots in South Africa, The
- Scottishness and Irishness in New Zealand since 1840
- Servants of the empire
- Sex, politics and empire
- Silk and empire
- Sites of imperial memory
- souls of white folk, The
- South African War reappraised, The
- suppression of the Atlantic slave trade, The
- Travellers in Africa
- Unfit for heroes
- Venomous encounters
- Victorian soldier in Africa, The
- Visions of empire
- Wales and the British overseas empire
- We are no longer in France
- Welsh missionaries and British imperialism
- West Indian intellectuals in Britain
- Western medicine as contested knowledge
- Writing imperial histories