Empireworld

How British Imperialism Has Shaped the Globe

Sathnam Sanghera author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd

Publishing:2nd Jan '25

£10.99

This title is due to be published on 2nd January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in other editions too:

Empireworld cover

THE INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER


In his ground-breaking new book, Sathnam Sanghera traces the legacies of British empire around the world.

‘A wonderful book’ Rory Stewart
‘Nuanced and deeply researched’Financial Times
‘Not just a welcome corrective but a book for our times’ Peter Frankopan
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The British empire was built on slavery, but it also pioneered abolition.
It spread democracy, but it also seeded geopolitical instability.
It devastated nature but it also gave birth to modern notions of environmentalism.
In this urgent sequel to Empireland, award-winning author and journalist Sathnam Sanghera extends his examination of British imperial legacies beyond Britain to the wider world.

Travelling across outposts of the former empire from Barbados and Mauritius to India and Nigeria and beyond, Sanghera puts to bed the conventional balance-sheet view of imperial history where the good is merely weighed up against the bad. In Empireworld, Sanghera instead seeks out nuance to reveal how contradictory forces of the British empire have shaped our world and what they mean for our place within it today.
--_

‘An absolute masterpiece’ James O’Brien
‘Puts Sanghera in the firmament of great imperial historians’ Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, i
‘Profoundly moving’ Elizabeth Day

If you thought Empireland was beautifully written – this follow up takes you even further – on an extraordinary, entertaining and eye-opening journey around the globe * Sadiq Khan *
Essential and absorbing reading for those not afraid to encounter diligently researched, complex, and often contradictory truths about colonial rule and its legacies * Professor Alan Lester *
This is a ground-breaking and eye-opening book, that everyone should read. Written with wit, nuance and academic rigour; it is a long overdue look at Empire and its effect on the world * Kavita Puri *
Once again, Sathnam Sanghera has advanced the civil conversation we all need to have about empire and its legacies * Jonathan Coe *
One of my favourite writers and Empireworld is a must read if you want to understand the world -- Greg James * BBC Radio *
Another smart, compassionate and essential book about the legacy of Empire and our braided histories * Meera Syal *
His writing on empire and colonialism will change how you understand modern Britain * Bella Mackie *
This brave, painful, urgent and timely book, is not, in other words, about 'goodies' or 'baddies'. It is about telling the truth about a nation’s imperial past in all its ambiguity — and creating dialogue between everyone who lays claim to Britishness -- Jerry Brotton * The Financial Times *
This is history with a personal touch . . . today’s history students will have much to ponder . . . there are plenty of new ideas, argued with passion. If Britain wants to move forward as a key player on the world stage, Sanghera demonstrates, we must take time to understand our past — all warts, and all wonders, considered -- Alice Loxton * The Sunday Times *
Refined, subtle, accurate, analytical, witty, engaging, and questioning . . . this book puts Sanghera in the firmament of great imperial historians. Furthermore, his lucid and accessible writing reaches out to those with closed minds. For that he deserves all the accolades he is sure to get -- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown * The i *
This is history a historian can recognise: a field that demands close study and resists easy generalisation or pat judgments . . . Sanghera’s book admirably marches us into the weeds of peer-reviewed scholarly work -- Quinn Slobodian * The New Statesman *
A conversation-changing look at the British Empire’s worldwide legacy . . . he’s done his reading. Sanghera is part of a wave of writers and historians changing the terms of debate. This book, with its varied voices and perspectives, widens them further -- Robbie Smith * Evening Standard *
A nuanced, complicated account of the British empire’s impact on the world as we know it . . . spells out the complexity of historical assessment with painstaking clarity, showing, repeatedly, the deep entwinement of the positive and negative contributions of empire -- Nandini Das * Guardian *
A powerful sequel * The Irish Independent *
Empireworld is an ambitious and valuable conversation starter for a long overdue reckoning with Britain’s colonial past * The Tablet *
A remarkable and important work - one that is finely judged, beautifully written and not just a welcome corrective but a book for our times. This is essential reading * Peter Frankopan *
An absolute masterpiece * James O'Brien *
Engages in deep research and historical re-analysis . . . also a profoundly moving work of personal insight, nuance, intelligence and compassion. Empireworld is a crucial addition to our understanding of the contradictions and legacies of colonial rule * Elizabeth Day *
A thoughtful and balanced book that rejects totting up the pluses and minuses of empire. He points out there’s something very odd about saying on the one hand we massacred people in Amritsar and empowered the slave-trade, and on the other hand we built railway lines and opened universities. What he tries to do is give a much richer, fuller picture of its different dimensions. A wonderful book * Rory Stewart *

ISBN: 9780241997086

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 35mm

Weight: 500g

464 pages