Ashley Jackson (historian)
Ashley Jackson | |
---|---|
Occupation |
Historian (King's College London) |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Ashley Jackson is a professor of imperial and military history in the Defence Studies Department at King's College London and a visiting fellow at Kellogg College, University of Oxford. Jackson is a specialist in the history of the British Empire. He argued in 2013 that historians have even extended to a third and fourth empire:
- The first British Empire was largely destroyed by the loss of the American colonies, followed by a 'swing to the east' and the foundation of a second British Empire based on commercial and territorial expansion in South Asia. The third British Empire was the construction of a 'white' dominion power bloc in the international system based on Britain's relations with its settler offshoots Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa....The fourth British Empire, meanwhile, is used to denote Britain's rejuvenated imperial focus on Africa and South-East Asia following the Second World War and the independence in 1947-8 of Britain's South Asian dependencies, when the Empire became a vital crutch in Britain's economic recovery.[1]
Books
Jackson has published several books, including:
- Botswana, 1939-1945 : An African Country at War (1999)
- War and Empire in Mauritius and the Indian Ocean (2001)
- The British Empire and the Second World War (2006)
- Mad Dogs and Englishmen: A Grand Tour of the British Empire at its Height (2009)
- Distant Drums : The Role of Colonies in British Imperial Warfare (February 2010)
- Churchill (2011)
- Illustrating Empire: A Visual History of British Imperialism (with David Tomkins)
- The British Empire: A Very Short Introduction (2013)
- Buildings of Empire (2013)
See also
Notes
- ↑ Ashley Jackson (2013). The British Empire: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford UP. p. 72.
External links
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