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Home » History » The Rule of Empires: Those Who Built Them, Those Who Endured Them, and Why They Always Fall

The Rule of Empires: Those Who Built Them, Those Who Endured Them, and Why They Always Fall

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Monday, August 27, 2012

The Rule of Empires: Those Who Built Them, Those Who Endured Them, and Why They Always Fall

Author: Timothy H. Parsons | Language: English | ISBN: 0199931151 | Format: PDF

The Rule of Empires: Those Who Built Them, Those Who Endured Them, and Why They Always Fall Description

From Publishers Weekly

Unhappy empires are, in crucial respects, all the same—and happy ones don't exist, according to this incisive study. Historian Parson (The British Imperial Century, 1815–1914) surveys imperial regimes from Rome's rule in ancient Britain to Spain's in Peru, Britain's in India and Kenya, and Nazi Germany's occupation of France. He identifies a single mercenary purpose behind these diverse examples: to loot the wealth and exploit the labor of conquered peoples. At the same time, he argues, stable rule requires the cooperation and assimilation of imperial subjects, which sets up a fatal contradiction—as an empire co-opts its subjects, it becomes harder to profitably exploit them, and the financial underpinnings of empire crumble. Challenging neo-imperialists like Niall Ferguson, the author insists that there is no such thing as benign empire; he fingers Britain's allegedly liberal empire as one of the most dysfunctional, because of its racist refusal to assimilate its populace. Parsons draws together an enormous amount of scholarship into a lucid, cold-eyed analysis of the mechanics of imperial control. The result is a compelling critique of empires past and of their latter-day nostalgists. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review


"Wide ranging, richly detailed, lucidly written, this compelling history of empires stresses the subject peoples on whose back these polities were built and whose resistance often caused their collapse. With his shrewdly selected mix of case studies, Parsons provides us with an important and timely rejoinder against those who romanticize imperial rule." --Dane Kennedy, George Washington University


"How refreshing to read a history of imperialism aimed at a broad audience that refuses to blur or soften the brutal effects and origins of empire.... Parsons offers a refreshing, engaging and cogently argued counterweight to the more usual neo-conservative reckoning of empire's alleged benefits." --Philippa Levine, H-Net


"A lucid, cold-eyed analysis of the mechanics of imperial control. The result is a compelling critique of empires past and of their latter-day nostalgists." --Publishers Weekly


"Parsons, an Africanist by training, samples instructive imperial experiences: Roman Britain, Muslim Spain, Spanish Peru, the East India Company in Italy, Napoleonic Italy, British Kenya, and Vichy France." --Charles S. Maie, Foreign Affairs


"Parsons sets an ambitious agenda for his case study on empires and largely succeeds. Explicitly setting out to counter the neoimperialist historiography of the last decade, Parsons uses a series of historic imperial episodes to illustrate the limits of empire and explain why empires subsequently fall.... Students of empire, historical or otherwise, would be well advised to read this book.... Highly recommended." --Choice


"Parsons deserves to be commended for tackling such a key question in imperial studies. He offers a thought-provoking interpretation of the dynamics of empire from ancient to modern manifestations. His questions touching the evolution of empires merit serious consideration by historians." --Jodie Mader, Thomas More College


"Parsons aims, laudably, to correct the imbalances... apologists of empire have introduced in readers' minds." --Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, Times Literary Supplement


"Vigorously written and intellectually engaging...there should be little dissent from the relevancy of its anti-imperialist imperative in the twenty-first century." --David Levering Lewis, The Journal of Modern History


See all Editorial Reviews
  • Product Details
  • Table of Contents
  • Reviews
  • Paperback: 496 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; Reprint edition (September 1, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199931151
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199931156
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
The main message running through Timothy Parsons' comprehensive and excellent book is this:empires fail and fall because "imperial rule always means degradation and exploitation...the fundamental reality of empires is that they are unsustainable because their subject find them intolerable".(page 4)
In the introduction,there is a discussion on the debate of empires.Parsons totally dismisses the claim made by neo-imperialists,among them the known hiatorian of Harvard Niall Fergusson,whose thesis is that after the 2001 terrorist attacks it was necessary to impose order on belligerent states and rogue nations which might possess chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.The neo-consevatives,joined by Christian evangelicals and right-wing ideologues have formed a kind of "neo-imperialist gang" and their assertion is that global security depended on America's readiness to become an imperial power based on the British model.
However,Parsons says that by their nature,empires were never humane,liberal or tolerant,because "would-be Caesars throughout history sought glory,land, and most important,plunder".(page 4)By picking up the examples of seven imperial rules:Roman Britain,Umayyad Spain,Spanish Peru,India under the British East India Company,Napoleonic Italy,Britain's Kenia colony and Nazi-occupied France,Parsons shows how and why empires are unbearable and eventually untenable.In its purest and most basic form,"empire" entails the formal and direct authoritarian rule of one group of people over the the other.Most empires shared certain features and characteristics resulting from their attempts to subjugate a conquered people permanently.Empires were the products of a temporary advantage in military technology,wealth and political will.The process of globalization is not something new.
Timothy Parsons' fabulously revealing book, "The Rule of Empires; Those Who Built Them, Those Who Endured Them, and Why They Always Fall" is the most insightful and educational resource to truly understand both the history and evolution of the methods, metastasis, and deceitful disguises of empires. Reading Parsons' masterpiece with an eye toward the type of 'analogy-thinking' that George Lakoff recommends, essentially shows all of human history is the history of empire, and the evolution of empire that Parsons work demonstrates the progress (sic) of empire's continuing success in ruling 'subjects' without arousing revolution.

The current state of the post-nation-state world's 21st century DGE (Disguised Global Empire), which uses empire's perfected predatory trick of employing disguises to hide its true nature, is extant on a wider basis than ever before, but is nominally head-quartered, not surprisingly, in the most powerful and most deluded previous nation-state, the United States --- but clearly encompasses other previous nation-state/countries like; UK, France, Israel, et al. in the global empire's realm.

Parsons' elucidation of empires' key factors of wealth and resource "extraction" and its skill in maintaining and playing upon distinctions between 'citizens' and 'subjects' can be clearly seen in empires over all ages --- and of even more value to a careful reader, shows analogies to the current 21st century's post-nation-state global empire.

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