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Colonial naval culture and British imperialism, 1922–67
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31 January 2015

Naval forces from fifteen colonial territories fought for the British Empire during the Second World War, providing an important new lens for understanding imperial power and colonial relations on the eve of decolonisation.
With sources from Britain, the Caribbean, Africa and Asia, this book examines the political, social and cultural impact of these forces; how they fortified British ‘prestige’ against rival imperialisms and colonial nationalisms; the importance of ‘men on the spot’, collaboration, ‘naval theatre’, and propaganda in mobilising colonial navalism; the role of naval training within the ‘civilising mission’ and colonial development; and how racial theory influenced naval recruitment, strategy and management, affecting imperial sentiment, ethnic relations, colonial identities, customs and order.
This book will appeal to imperial, maritime and regional historians, by broadening our understanding of navies as social and cultural institutions, where power was expressed through the ideas and relations they cultivated, as well as their guns.
'Not since the days when Herbert Richmond occupied Cambridge University's Vere Harmsworth chair in imperial and naval history has the interconnections between the two fields been so studiously regarded by a newer generation of historians comfortable in the historiography of both genres.'
Chris Madsen, North Vancouver, British Columbia, The Northern Mariner, April 2016
Introduction: The origins of colonial naval development
Part I: The Caribbean
Trinidad
The Cayman Islands
Part II: East Africa
Kenya and Zanzibar, pre-1945
Post-war East Africa
Part III: Southeast Asia
The Straits Settlements and Malaya
Part IV: East Asia
Hong Kong, pre-1945
Post-war Hong Kong
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index