A new appreciation of the importance of space and place has characterized imperial historians’ recent “spatial turn.” With a case study of the simultaneous transformation of different sites of the British Empire during a moment of reform and restructuring in the 1830s, this lecture suggests that historians of empire still have much to gain from a consideration of the ways in which geographers have conceptualized these phenomena.
Funding
Snapshots of Empire: managing a diverse empire all at once : LEVERHULME TRUST | RPG-2015-155
Australian Legacies of British Slavery: Capital, Land and Labour : Australian Research Council | DP240101389
Western Australian Legacies of British Slavery : Australian Research Council | DP200100094