When Edmund Burke spoke at one of the many trials concerned with the impeachment of Warren Hastings (1788—1795), he offered a scathing diagnosis of the British East India Company. At the heart of his accusation, the idea that the Company
[Project Proposal] The Miss World Beauty Pageant: A Transnational Perspective
Although for many ‘the Miss World Beauty Pageant’ is no more than an out-dated guilty pleasure, in its heyday the contest was covered by the BBC and drew in over 27.5 million viewers for the 1968 finale.[1] Today, similar international
Project Proposal: Social Democracy, Colonialism, and the Legacy of the Second International
In the shadow of the Second International: Social-democratic colonial policy in France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, 1936-1958. Historical Context: Prior to the First World War, the parties of the Second International were bound to a firmly anti-colonialist and
Project Proposal – Japanese Immigrants in America and the Wartime contexts of Japan’s East Asian empire, 1894-1945
Japan’s entry into the modern, globalised era arguably came in the 1850s with Commodore Matthew Perry’s expedition to Japan in 1853 and the forced opening of Japanese ports to Western trade and commerce. The bluntness of Western imperialism, as epitomised
[Project Proposal] The Opium Trade: International Convergence and the Birth of Modern China
The Opium Trade was an international network to behold. The diversity of actors involved in the trade make its history truly transnational. Over the course of the late modern period, Opium came to be the most important commodity in Western
Project Proposal: Valide Sultans as Transnational Actors
Valide Sultans (the official mothers of the Ottoman Sultan), are ideally suited for transnational analysis. The Ottomans relied heavily on a slave system for filling high ranking positions, including in the Sultan’s harem, because they believed that slaves would not
Project Proposal: The English Factory at Hirado
The English Factory at Hirado, Japan. A Microhistory of English Merchants in the early 17th century. We often talk about the practicality of transnational history; why do we study it? What can we truly learn? It seems that transnational ideas
‘Intercolonial Knowledge Trading in the Antilles, 1716 – 1800’ – Project Proposal
In 1788, French botaniste du roi Hyppolyte Nectoux received seven new plants from British crown botanist Dr. Thomas Clarke for his botanical station at Saint Domingue, and in 1789 he received twenty more. This remarkable example of cross-cultural knowledge exchange
Project Proposal: EU
Research Question: To what extent do supranational organisations impact individual identity in the case of the European Union (EU)? Thesis While EU citizens identify themselves as Europeans, they foremost identify with their national roots. However, all Europeans share an identifying
The Cannes Festival and Transnationalism in Film
Art can be an excellent medium for learning about other cultures. I find film to be the most engaging of all common art forms. It feeds on our most perceptive senses – sight and sound — but also taps in
The Great Game
My other module I’m taking this semester covers modern Iran form 1800 to the present day. Last week we covered the Great Game, which refers to the imperial competition in Central Asia between the juggernaut empires of Russia and Britain.
A Forgotten Exchange?
It seems that in the last two years, transnational ideas have been challenged across the world. From Brexit to Trump and his trade protectionist policies the interconnectedness of the world seems to be unravelling at its seams. Repeatedly politicians hark
Ubuntu
Last night I attended one of the student run fashion shows, Ubuntu. The show was suppose to be set in Mansa Musa’s Court prior to western colonisation. The vision was to recover the narrative of a strong, powerful, and flourishing
Cooking: Procrastination for Productivity
This week I’ve decided to write about cooking. Before I left for the holiday period last semester I was given Michel Roux’s new cookbook, the french revolution. Its packed with traditional French recipes that appear under subheadings like ‘Légumes, Légumineuses et
She’s beauty and she’s grace…
On 18th October 1954 Antigone Costanda, Miss Egypt, became the first non-European to be crowned Miss World. The following year, during the 1955 Miss World beauty pageant, Costanda did not attend the event and crown her successor as per the