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Empires Without Imperialism - Anglo-American Decline and the Politics of Deflection (Hardcover)
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Empires Without Imperialism - Anglo-American Decline and the Politics of Deflection (Hardcover)
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The end of the Cold War ushered in a moment of nearly pure American
dominance on the world stage, yet that era now seems ages ago.
Since 9/11 many informed commentators have focused on the relative
decline of American power in the global system. While some have
welcomed this as a salutary development, outspoken proponents of
American power-particularly neoconservatives-have lamented this
turn of events. As Jeanne Morefield argues in Empires Without
Imperialism, the defenders of a liberal international order steered
by the US have both invoked nostalgia for a golden liberal past and
succumbed to amnesia, forgetting the decidedly illiberal trajectory
of US continental and global expansion. Yet as she shows, the US is
not the first liberal hegemon to experience a wave of misguided
nostalgia for a bygone liberal order; England had a remarkably
similar experience in the early part of the twentieth century. The
empires of the US and the United Kingdom were different in
character-the UK's was territorially based while the US relied more
on pure economic power-yet both nations mouthed the rhetoric of
free markets and political liberty. And elites in both painted
pictures of the past in which first England and then the US
advanced the cause of economic and political liberty throughout the
world. Morefield contends that at the times of their decline,
elites in both nations utilized the attributes of an imagined past
to essentialize the nature of the liberal state. Working from that
framework, they bemoaned the possibility of liberalism's decline
and suggested a return to a true liberal order as a solution to
current woes. By treating liberalism as fixed through time,
however, they actively forgot their illiberal pasts as colonizers
and economic imperialists. According to Morefield, these nostalgic
narratives generate a cynical 'politics in the passive' where the
liberal state gets to have it both ways: it is both compelled to
act imperially to save the world from illiberalism and yet is never
responsible for the outcome of its own illiberal actions in the
world or at home. By comparing the practice and memory of
liberalism in early nineteenth century England and the contemporary
United States, Empires Without Imperialism addresses a major gap in
the literature. While there are many examinations of current
neoliberal imperialism by critical theorists as well as analyses of
liberal imperialism by scholars of the history of political
thought, no one has of yet combined the two approaches. It thus
provides a much fuller picture of the rhetorical strategies behind
liberal imperialist uses of history. At the same time, the book
challenges presentist assumptions about the novelty of our current
political moment.
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