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Empire, Incorporated

The Corporations That Built British Colonialism

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Across four centuries, British colonialism was above all the business of corporations. Corporations conceived, promoted, financed, and governed overseas expansion, making claims over territory and peoples while ensuring that British and colonial society were invested, quite literally, in their ventures. Colonial companies were also relentlessly controversial, frequently in debt, and prone to failure. The corporation was well-suited to overseas expansion not because it was an inevitable juggernaut but because it was an elusive contradiction: public and private; person and society; subordinate and autonomous; centralized and diffuse; immortal and precarious; national and cosmopolitan—a legal fiction with very real power.

Breaking from traditional histories in which corporations take a supporting role by doing the dirty work of sovereign states in exchange for commercial monopolies, Philip Stern argues that corporations took the lead in global expansion and administration. As Empire, Incorporated makes clear, venture colonialism did not cease with the end of empire.

Challenging conventional wisdom about where power is held on a global scale, Stern complicates the supposedly firm distinction between private enterprise and the state, offering a new history of the British Empire, as well as a new history of the corporation.

©2023 The President and Fellows of Harvard College (P)2023 Tantor
Europe Great Britain Politics & Government Colonial Period England Imperialism British Empire Law Socialism Taxation Latin American Africa Capitalism
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Underneath the mountain of information packed into this dense book there is a story fighting to get out. The research is admirable, but the writing and editing is not. After the latest long list of dates and people's titles (including aka in parenthesis) a lifeless treaty would drop onto the page, before we move onto the next one. If you are an historian you'll be able to make lots of marginal notes in your dissertation. If you are a normal human being, you'll probably be initially fascinated by the legal arrangements behind colonisation and plantations, then lose the will to listen after a couple of hours of the author listing all the treaties in fine detail. More of an academic treatise than an audiobook.

Book Packed with Information, poorly written

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