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Purifying Empire
Obscenity and the Politics of Moral Regulation in Britain, India and Australia
Charting attempts to regulate the obscene within the Britain Empire, and the resulting contradictions that sustained imperial and colonial regimes.
Deana Heath (Author)
9780521194358, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 3 June 2010
244 pages
23.5 x 16 x 1.8 cm, 0.54 kg
'Heath has written an exceptional book on nineteenth-century British colonial policy and the ways in which [this] came to impact policies in Australia and India and the governing of those nation states.' LIMINA: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies
Purifying Empire explores the material, cultural and moral fragmentation of the boundaries of imperial and colonial rule in the British Empire in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It charts how a particular bio-political project, namely the drive to regulate the obscene in late nineteenth-century Britain, was transformed from a national into a global and imperial venture and then re-localized in two different colonial contexts, India and Australia, to serve decidedly different ends. While a considerable body of work has demonstrated both the role of empire in shaping moral regulatory projects in Britain and their adaptation, transformation and, at times, rejection in colonial contexts, this book illustrates that it is in fact only through a comparative and transnational framework that it is possible to elucidate both the temporalist nature of colonialism and the political, racial and moral contradictions that sustained imperial and colonial regimes.
Introduction: books, boundaries and Britishness
1. Colonialism and governmentality
2. From sovereignty to governmentality: the emergence of obscenity regulation as a bio-political project in Britain
3. Globalizing the local: imperial hygiene and the regulation of the obscene
4. Localizing the global in settler societies: regulating the obscene in Australia
5. Localizing the global in exploitation colonies: regulating the obscene in India
Conclusion: retangling empire, nation, colony and globe
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: Colonialism & imperialism [HBTQ], Historical geography [HBTP], Modern history to 20th century: c 1700 to c 1900 [HBLL], British & Irish history [HBJD1]