Slavery and Empire
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss slavery and empire; two themes that run right through this country’s history. Britain’s imperial project dominated at least the last three centuries of our national life. Its advocates claim it was a civilising mission by which Britain spread enlightenment and improvement across the globe. Opponents have long seen it as a brutal business, with Britons cast as cruel oppressors out to exploit a conquered world. Is our imperial history so clear cut? What if Britons were themselves captives, either as prisoners of an imperial enterprise that sucked them in, generation after generation or, in some startling cases, as slaves to foreign peoples? Is slavery an inevitable part of empire: does it come with the territory? And how did Britain finally shake it off?
→ Listen on BBC Sounds website
Guests
- Linda Colley
5 episodes
School Professor of History, LSE - Catherine Hall
3 episodes
Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History, University College London -
Felipe Fernandez Armesto No other episodes
Professorial Research Fellow, Queen Mary College London
Related episodes
-
The British Empire’s Legacy
31 Dec, 1998 940 History of Europe -
Imperial Science
1 Feb, 2001 940 History of Europe -
The British Empire
8 Nov, 2001 900 History -
Roman Slavery
5 Apr, 2018 930 History of the Ancient World -
Cultural Imperialism
27 Jun, 2002 300 Social sciences, sociology and anthropology -
Wilberforce
22 Feb, 2007 320 Political science -
The East India Company
26 Jun, 2003 380 Commerce, communications and transportation -
The Industrial Revolution
23 Dec, 2010 940 History of Europe -
The Nation State
14 Oct, 1999 320 Political science -
Roman Britain
1 May, 2003 930 History of the Ancient World
Programme ID: p00548jd
Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00548jd
Auto-category: 909.097124 (British imperialism)
Hello (First sentence from this episode)
Hello, this week on In Our Time we're discussing captivity and empire, which brings in slavery and empire, two of the themes that run through this country's imperial history.