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TRANSNATIONAL PROJECTS OF EMPIRE IN FRANCE, C.1815–C.1870*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 October 2014

DAVID TODD*
Affiliation:
Department of History, King's College London E-mail: david.todd@kcl.ac.uk

Abstract

Rather than renouncing empire after the fall of Napoleon, this essay argues, French liberal thinkers expressed a sustained preference for a strategy based on transnational connections, or what imperial historians describe as informal imperialism. The eulogy of European Christian civilization exemplified by François Guizot's lecture at the Sorbonne in 1828 served not only to legitimize French global ambitions, but also to facilitate cooperation with other European imperial powers, especially Britain, and indigenous collaborators. Liberal enthusiasm for the spread of Western civilization also inspired the emergence of a French version of free-trade imperialism, of which the economist Michel Chevalier proved a consistent advocate. Only when such aspirations were frustrated did liberals reluctantly endorse colonial conquest, on an exceptional basis in Algeria after 1840 and on a global scale after 1870. The allegedly abrupt liberal conversion to empire in the nineteenth century may instead be construed as a tactical shift from informal to formal dominance.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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Footnotes

*

Thanks are due to Jeremy Adelman, Christophe Charle, Richard Drayton, Emma Rothschild, Edward Shawcross and the anonymous referees for their helpful comments and suggestions on earlier versions of this article. Translations of quotations originally in French are my own, although I have consulted and often followed contemporary translations when they were available.

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