Churchill and Empire, Lawrence James
Churchill and Empire, Lawrence James
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Churchill and Empire
Portrait of an Imperialist

Author: Lawrence James

Narrator: Gareth Armstrong

Unabridged: 14 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/08/2014


Synopsis

One of our finest narrative historians, and journalist for the SUNDAY TIMES and LITERARY REVIEW, Lawrence James, has written a genuinely new biography of Winston Churchill, set within a fully detailed historical context, but solely focusing on his relationship with the British Empire. As a young army officer in the late 19th century, Churchill's first experience of the Empire was serving in conflicts in India, South Africa and the Sudan. His attitude towards the Empire at the time was the stereotypical Victorian paternalistic approach - a combination of feeling responsible and feeling superior. Conscious even then of his political career ahead, Churchill's natural benevolence towards the Empire was occasionally overruled for political reasons, and he found himself reluctantly supporting - or at least not publicly condemning - British atrocities.

As a politician he consistently relied on the Empire for support during crises, but was angered by any demands for nationalisation. He held what many would regard today as racist views, in that he felt that some nationalities were superior to others, but he didn't regard those positions as fixed. His (some might say obsequious) relationship with America reflected that view. America was a former colony where the natives had become worthy to rule themselves, but - he felt - still had that tie to Britain. Thus he overlooked the frequently expressed American view that the Empire was a hangover from a bygone era of colonisation, and reflected poorly on Britain's ability to conduct herself as a political power in the current world order.

This outmoded attitude was one of the reasons the British voters rejected him after a Second World War in which - it was universally felt - he had led the country brilliantly. His attitude remained Victorian in a world that was shaping up very differently. However, it would be a mistake to consider Churchill merely as an anachronistic soldier. He grasped the problems of the Cold War immediately, believing that immature nations prematurely given independence would be more likely to be sucked into the vortex of Communism. This view chimed with American foreign policy, and made the Americans rather more pragmatic about their demands for self-governance for Empire countries.

Lawrence James has written a fascinating portrait of an endlessly interesting statesman - and one that includes tantalising vignettes about his penchants for silk underwear and champagne.

Read by Gareth Armstrong

(p) 2014 Orion Publishing Group

About Lawrence James

Lawrence James,
one of our finest narrative historians, especially on imperial subjects, is
the author of The Rise and Fall of the British Empire, Raj, and The
Aristocrats. He lives near Oxford.


Reviews

Goodreads review by KOMET on August 31, 2021

"CHURCHILL AND EMPIRE: A Portrait of an Imperialist" provides the reader with a view as well as insights into the life and character of Winston Churchill from the time he graduated from Sandhurst as a young army officer in the mid-1890s (when Britain was the premiere world power with an Empire that......more

Goodreads review by Linda Dew on April 14, 2015

In depth review of the politics of WWI, WWII and the periods after each war. Helped me to understand current world politics even better.......more

Goodreads review by Julian on May 14, 2019

I am going to write two reviews. One for the way the book was written and one for the content. Mr. James paints a brief, but very detailed portrait of Mr. Churchill and his life in the realm of foreign policy, specifically in matters regarding the empire. He gives detailed accounts of all of the eve......more

Goodreads review by Hans on May 02, 2015

Excellent book. Nothing wrong with reviewing a Great Man's thinking and actions against both norms in his times vs. contemporary hindsight.......more

Goodreads review by Miroku on January 18, 2015

Too much of a secular hagiography (though, in some ways, it is more of a kind of history of the times of Churchill than a straightforward biography) and too little critique of imperialism for what I expected in a contemporary book with a title like it has, "Churchill and Empire: A Portrait of an Imp......more


Quotes

Seemingly miraculously, Lawrence James has found something fresh to say about Churchill by concentrating on his romance with the Empire. James is an unabashed admirer of the great man. SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

Lawrence James is the doyen of Empire historians THE SPECTATOR

(A) highly original book... an entertaining read as well as a serious historical analysis... a pioneering biography of Churchill... It will be of abiding interest to all those concerned with Britain's past and how it influenced the world in which we live today. THE TIMES

a fascinating portrait of an endlessly interesting man... it makes for wonderful reading. You will certainly learn a thing or two about our finest statesman. THE SUN

witty and erudite... James' book does an important job THE SUNDAY TIMES

Seemingly miraculously, Lawrence James has found something fresh to say about him [Churchill] by concentrating on the great man's lifelong romance with the Empire and viewing his multifaceted activities through that prism. THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH. Book of the Week

a new, insightful narrative METRO

He writes extremely well and refreshes a multitude of familiar topics with narrative skill. The clarity, pace and punch of his prose carry the reader along. LITERARY REVIEW

There have been so many books written about Churchill, but this one looking at his vision of Empire is a refreshingly new angle. GOOD BOOK GUIDE

All the narrative drama, colour and insight that we have come to expect is once again on irresistible show in Churchill and Empire. He makes a convincing case that empire was never far from Churchill's mind and that the great conflicts of the 20th century in which he was involved were essentially imperial in character. IRISH TIMES