Times Monster, Priya Satia
Times Monster, Priya Satia
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Time's Monster
How History Makes History

Author: Priya Satia

Narrator: Tanya Rodriguez, Priya Satia

Unabridged: 16 hr 45 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 05/11/2021


Synopsis

For generations, British thinkers told the history of an empire whose story was still very much in the making. While they wrote of conquest, imperial rule in India, the Middle East, Africa, and the Caribbean was consolidated. While they described the development of imperial governance, rebellions were brutally crushed. As they reimagined empire during the two world wars, decolonization was compromised. Priya Satia shows how these historians not only interpreted the major political events of their time but also shaped the future that followed.

Satia makes clear that historical imagination played a significant role in the unfolding of empire. History emerged as a mode of ethics in the modern period, endowing historians from John Stuart Mill to Winston Churchill with outsized policymaking power. At key moments in Satia's telling, we find Britons warding off guilty conscience by recourse to particular notions of history, especially those that spotlighted great men helpless before the will of Providence. Braided with this story is an account of alternative visions articulated by anticolonial thinkers such as William Blake, Mahatma Gandhi, and E. P. Thompson. By the mid-twentieth century, their approaches had reshaped the discipline of history and the ethics that came with it.

About Priya Satia

Priya Satia is the award-winning author of Spies in Arabia and Empire of Guns. The Raymond A. Spruance Professor of International History and professor of British history at Stanford University, she has written for the Financial Times, the Nation, Time, the Washington Post, and other outlets.


Reviews

Goodreads review by 8stitches 9lives on October 19, 2020

An award-winning author reconsiders the role of historians in political debate. For generations, British thinkers told the history of an empire whose story was still very much in the making. While they wrote of how conquest, imperial rule in India, the Middle East, Africa, and the Caribbean was cons......more

Goodreads review by Peter on March 03, 2021

The central question at the heart of Priya Satia's book is, why has the British Empire seemingly be given a free pass? Considering the still lasting effects of empire, from partition in India, to the slave trade, from famines and riots to the current mess in the Middle East, how is it that it is sti......more

Goodreads review by Malcolm on August 13, 2024

Britain’s empire is both valorised and reviled, still mourned as lost and still loathed as genocidal, brutal, and exploitative; appreciated for its cultural worlds and repudiated for its attempted destruction of those cultural worlds it encountered and occupied. In England it is both written out of......more

Goodreads review by Zack on April 12, 2024

This book has such an interesting premise and the general argument that people's understandings of history and and their role in history influenced their actions in the present was interesting. When the book actually talked about this argument, I enjoyed it. However, the writing in this book was abs......more

Goodreads review by Arthur on July 29, 2021

Contains possibly the most comprehensive overview of historiography I’ve read in one book and then goes on to put forward a convincing narrative on the impact of history and memory of empire on politics and society, race and nationalism. Thoroughly enjoyed and I’ll definitely be dipping back in for......more