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Palgrave Macmillan

Colonial Extraction and Industrial Steam Power, 1790-1880

Decarbonising Imperial History

  • Book
  • Jul 2024

Overview

  • Demonstrates the transnational complexities of colonial extraction, with cases from the Middle East, Australia and India
  • Addresses growing curiosity around the history of fossil capitalism and how it fuelled colonial expansion
  • Responds to public interest about the origins of climate change and the relations of power which precipitated it

Part of the book series: Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies (CIPCSS)

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Keywords

  • Coal
  • Carbon
  • Colonialism
  • Colonial expansion
  • Energy history
  • Fossil fuel
  • First nations
  • Imperial finance
  • Race
  • Indigenous history
  • Australia
  • Industrialisation
  • Coalonialism
  • Economic history
  • Carbon economy
  • British Empire
  • British colonies
  • Coal-fired colonialism
  • Coal extraction
  • Colonial modernity

About this book

This book untangles the connections between British industrialization and colonial expansion in the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The addition of fossil fuels to the energy mix in this period drove overwhelming social and economic change in Britain, the north-east United States, and Europe, but it also had important and uneven consequences within a range of Euro-American colonies. Opening a new field of inquiry into fossil fuel-powered technologies and their critical role in colonial expansion, this book demonstrates how carbon-based economies dramatically accelerated the annexing of foreign lands and the extraction of their resources. Yet, while the use of coal on a commercial scale from the late 1700s powered an explosion of growth in manufacturing between 1760 and 1840 and these years coincided with the incursion and violence on colonial frontiers, the peripheries tended to rely on wood where they could. This intensification of animal and timber power complicated the nationalist narratives of coal-fired industrialization and economic development. A history of the meanings and ideas around carbon, fossil fuels, and their bearing within colonial expansion is increasingly relevant as rapid changes to climate bring into focus the legacy of carbonization in dispossession, sustainability, environmental, labor, and atmospheric relational histories.

 

 

 

Reviews

“An exciting addition to energy history, this collection provocatively redirects attention to the complex relationship between colonialism and fossil fuels. Through careful studies of Australian colonial and imperial appetites for coal power, the collection offers insights into the uneven development of energy transitions and expands our view of fossil capitalism to account for Indigenous knowledge, dispossession, and resistance. It provides essential new texture for histories of carbon frontiers in Australia and across the modern world.”  

—Jarrod Hore, Co-Director of the New Earth Histories Research Program and Postdoctoral Fellow, University of New South Wales


Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Archaeology and History, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia

    Liz Conor

About the editor

Liz Conor is an ARC Future Fellow and Associate Professor in History at La Trobe University, Australia. Former editor of the Aboriginal History Journal, she has published extensively on colonial and modern visual and print history, including her most recent book, Skin Deep: Settler Impressions of Aboriginal Women (2016). Liz has been a columnist at New Matilda, and her freelance essays have appeared in The Guardian, The Saturday Paper, The Age, The Conversation, Meanjin, The Drum, Crikey.com, and Arena.

 

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: Colonial Extraction and Industrial Steam Power, 1790-1880

  • Book Subtitle: Decarbonising Imperial History

  • Editors: Liz Conor

  • Series Title: Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies

  • Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham

  • eBook Packages: History, History (R0)

  • Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024

  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-031-51149-3Due: 26 July 2024

  • Softcover ISBN: 978-3-031-51152-3Due: 26 July 2024

  • eBook ISBN: 978-3-031-51150-9Due: 26 July 2024

  • Series ISSN: 2635-1633

  • Series E-ISSN: 2635-1641

  • Edition Number: 1

  • Number of Pages: XVIII, 175

  • Number of Illustrations: 8 b/w illustrations

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