When Boris Johnson came out in support of Brexit, he likened the media scrum that awaited him outside his home to āan imperial goat-fuckā. This book isnāt about that kind of shadow but the lineage of a predominantly but not exclusively right-wing British foreign policy focused on promoting economic and cultural ties with an Anglosphere.
Concise and well-written, Kenny and Pearceās book will be of great value to students interested in the history of Britainās international relations from the heyday of empire to the present. It offers a historically grounded overview of this almost impossibly amorphous (and rather dull) tradition in high politics. Attempts to strengthen British power through political alliances based on shared language, culture and history began in earnest with the empireās phase of Anglo-globalisation and had a racist element.
This late 19th-century project was based on a vision of a Greater Britain taking up the āwhite manās burdenā and the concept of the āEnglish-speaking peoplesā. This Anglosphere could refer to āthe Old Commonwealthā (Australia, Canada and New Zealand), but often it meant āAnglo-Americaā and āthe special relationshipā. More recently, itās been lauded as a community of shared values, while the recent āglobal Britainā campaign emphasised economic ties with the US, India and other areas of the Commonwealth.
Written by two eminent professors of public policy, this account begins with the mid Victorian origins of the Anglosphere, familiar to imperial historians. It moves quickly on to changing political discourses after the end of empire, with particular emphasis on Churchillās formula for British āgreat powerā status focused on ties with the US and the Commonwealth. The contemporary period offers the most interesting, less trodden material, including discussions of the āintellectualsā of the Anglosphere, and how Eurosceptics have cleaved towards it.
Āé¶¹
The final chapter is called āBrexit ā The Anglosphere Triumphant?ā Indeed, this book is marketed as an explanation for Brexit. As the authors put it, the Anglosphere āis a vital, overlooked part of the complex story that has led up to Brexitā. Overlooked, possibly; vital, no. I doubt many Brexiteers thought āWeāll be OK, the Canadians still like usā.
Leavers voted for what they didnāt want: a German-dominated European super-state and uncontrolled migration (because Great-Uncle Henry had died on a trolley waiting in a hospital corridor for eight hours). Nostalgia ā if that played a part ā was not for an imperial past but for heroically āgoing it aloneā in war, even to the brink of national self-immolation. So, the logic followed, letās face decline with the same spirit.
Āé¶¹
Itās true, nevertheless, as the authors argue, that the Anglosphere has reappeared as a partial post-Brexit solution. It makes some sense. An Anglosphere does exist on a practical level: English-speaking people connected by history, culture, education systems and trade. Alas, it also has its extremists, who see such alliances in terms of a pernicious ideology of racism and neo-imperialism. āMale, pale and staleā, they are long past their sell-by date. As the late Christopher Hitchens pointed out, an Anglosphere coalition to fight extremism could never succeed āon the imperial terrain of Kipling and Rhodesā. However, the main winners of an Anglosphere triumphant would be lesser members of the royal family, assured of free overseas jollies for years to come. Lots to look forward to, then.
Joanna Lewis is associate professor of international history at the London School of Economics and the author of Empire of Sentiment: The Death of Livingstone and the Myth of Victorian Imperialism (2018).
Shadows of Empire: The Anglosphere in British Politics
By Michael Kenny and Nick Pearce
Polity Press, 224pp, £50.00 and £14.99
ISBN 9781509516605 and 9781509516612
Published 6 April 2018
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