Empires Without Imperialism
Anglo-American Decline and the Politics of Deflection
Jeanne Morefield
Reviews and Awards
"Jeanne Morefield documents the unexpected and troubling similarities between how British intellectuals viewed their waning empire and how we Americans often think about the uses of our hegemony, even or especially when we fear it is now in decline. Making the currency of the past unmistakable for political theorists, intellectual historians, and engaged citizens alike, this provocative book throws down the gauntlet to those who would turn their eyes from-or explain away-harsh realities of power and violence in the present." --Samuel Moyn, author of The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History
"Morefield gives us a superb portrait of the 'deflective' politics that have long characterized liberal imperialism. She lays bare the intellectual strategies that liberals from Jan Smuts to Michael Ignatieff have used to reconcile their declared commitment to freedom with the domination of other societies, and to shield democratic powers from the very critical inquiry they claim is essential to democracy. Rich with historical detail and sharp analysis, this is an unsettling and important book." --Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago
"In this erudite and original historical and contemporary study, Jeanne Morefield not only exposes the rhetorical strategies of deflection employed by theorists to legitimate neo-liberal imperialism today. She also shows the deep roots of these strategies in nineteenth and early twentieth century liberalism." --James Tully, University of Victoria