1. The emergence of a new type of hero: British and French
contexts
2. Imperial heroes and the market I: the written world
3. Imperial heroes and the market II: the audiovisual world
4. Imperial heroes and domestic politics
5. Cross-Channel Entente? The values embodied by imperial
heroes
6. The creation of the Marchand legend, 1895–1906
7. George Warrington Steevens, Blackwood Publishers and the making
of 'With Kitchener to Khartoum'
Berny Sèbe is Lecturer in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies at the University of Birmingham
'In this superbly researched and elegantly written book, Sèbe has
opened a vital new chapter in the cultural history of empire, and
also helped to explain why it was often so difficult to control
headstrong "men on the spot". And by comparing the practices of
this "hero-making" industry in Britain and France, he has made an
important contribution to the wider scholarship on Europe’s
imperialisms.'
John Darwin, University of Oxford
'Essential reading for all students and scholars of colonial
history. Sèbe is sensitive to the very different French and British
contexts of the individuals he presents, but the overall impact of
his study lies in its insightful delineation of the phenomenon of
"celebrity colonialism". This book constitutes a timely
intervention in debates about the complex interactions between
European and African histories.'
Charles Forsdick, University of Liverpool
'Berny Sèbe has written an original and imaginative work. This
stimulating and resourceful book penetrates the reality of
myth-building in the colonial era.'
Wm. Roger Louis, University of Texas at Austin
'Brilliantly combines the history of mentalities and quantitative
history to reveal the mediated nature of, and political alchemy
behind, these figures at the heart of the "imperial mindset" of
Britain and France.'
Jacques Frémeaux, University of Paris-Sorbonne
‘Undoubtedly a highly significant and elegantly written work.’
Thomas Sharp, Oxford Brookes University, War in History 24 (1)
‘The work is a first-class contribution to understanding, and will
hopefully open the way for more such comparative analyses. ‘
John Mullen, University of Rouen, Quaderna
‘The broad temporal perspective and the multiplicity of different
imperial heroes analysed make this study both richly detailed and
highly pertinent to an array of different scholarly questions and
fields. Thus, it should be recommended to students and scholars not
only of imperial history, but also of Franco-British relations,
French studies, cultural history and the history of popular
culture.’
Joanna Warson, University of Portsmouth, The Journal of Imperial
and Commonwealth History, May 2014
‘Berny Sèbe has written an excellent comparative account of the
rise to prominence
in Britain and France of male colonial figures in the late
nineteenth century and their
continued relevance into the interwar years….Sèbe’s book is very
good at explaining how the reputations of key imperial figures were
established, and on providing the deep context to the creation of
national reputations at this time.’
Stephen Heathorn, McMaster University, French History, January
2016
‘Its archival richness and its refreshing reliance on literary
history make it not only a balanced, but also a finely textured,
interdisciplinary piece of scholarship.’
Priyasha Mukhopadhyay, University of Oxford, Interventions
International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, July 2015
‘This book is one of the (too) few attempts at comparing French and
British late 19thand early 20th-century imperialisms. The relative
scarcity of relevant comparative studies of modern imperialisms is
understandable. Such an approach requires both proficiency in two
separate national historiographies and knowledge of two very
different sets of archival records. Berny Sèbe was able to overcome
these obstacles in his detailed study of the development of the
imperial hero from the 1870s to the late 1930s without falling into
the trap of generalization or mere juxtaposition. This fruitful
cultural history of colonialism focuses in particular on the
connection between the advent of High Imperialism and the rise of
mass culture in the last decades of the 19th century. This work—the
culmination of a years-long research project supervised by John G.
Darwin—was therefore logically published in ‘Studies in
Imperialism’ (Manchester UP). John Mackenzie was the general editor
for that series for many years. Sèbe’s examination of colonial
heroes owes a great deal to his well-known works on imperial
culture.’
Daniel Foliard, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, Cahiers
victoriens et Édouardiens 82, Autumn 2015
‘This well-researched book is an essential contribution to the
history of empire and will be of great use to students and scholars
of colonial history.’
Kelsey Suggitt, University of Portsmouth, Modern and Contemporary
France March 2016
‘This book is a major addition to reputation studies and to
imperial history. The author has clear command over the political
contexts in Britain and France from the late nineteenth to the
mid-twentieth century: there is much here that will provoke
established scholars to think about popular imperialism and
imperialist iconsin new ways. But Sèbe’s work is also accessible to
those new to the field, offering, for instance, a helpful appendix
of short biographies of the keyfigures he discusses. Sèbe paves the
way for future research on imperial myth-making, having
successfully established the importance of the heroic legend to
both British and French imperial culture.’
Justin D.Livingstone, Queen’s University Belfast, HER, 556, October
2017
‘Heroic Imperialistsin Africa stands at the crossroads between
imperial, cultural, publishing and even literary history. It opens
new perspectives and undoubtedly deserves to be widely read.’
Daniel Follard, Cahiers victoriens et édouardiens, Vol 82, Autumn
2015
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