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Empire, Trade, and Resistance: France's Colonial World, 1600–1962 MTA
An integrated history of French imperialism from sugar plantations to decolonization struggles
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Empire, Trade, and Resistance: France's Colonial World, 1600–1962 "Empire, Trade, and Resistance: France's Colonial World, 1600–1962" offers a comprehensive history of French imperialism, integrating metropolitan policy with colonial experiences. The book traces French expansion from its mercantilist origins in the 17th century, focusing on the Atlantic economy driven by sugar and slavery in the Caribbean, to its eventual unraveling through decolonization struggles. It highlights how economic logics of profit and extraction, built on coerced labor and dispossessed land, were foundational to the empire's establishment and growth, shaping port cities like Nantes and Bordeaux and fostering complex financial networks. The narrative emphasizes that empire was a constantly negotiated field of power, profit, and cultural encounter, rather than a monolithic entity.

The book delves into the evolution of French imperial ideology, particularly the "civilizing mission" of the 18th and 19th centuries, which justified rule through enlightenment, science, and the imposition of French law, faith, and language. It examines key tools of colonial governance such as the Code Noir, mapping, census-taking, and surveillance, revealing how knowledge production was intertwined with control and classification of diverse populations in regions like North and West Africa and Indochina. However, the book also underscores that colonial societies were dynamic, characterized by cultural blending (creolization) in food, music, and religion, and persistent resistance from enslaved people, indentured laborers, and indigenous communities against imperial order.

The latter half of the book explores the crises and transformations of the 20th century. It details the empire's mobilization during World War I, the economic and political upheavals between the wars, the complexities of Vichy and Resistance in the colonies during World War II, and the intense postwar struggles for independence. Key conflicts like the First Indochina War and Algeria’s "Long War" are examined, alongside the more negotiated paths to independence in West Africa. The book concludes by analyzing the enduring legacies of empire in postcolonial France—including migration, contested memories, and ongoing debates over cultural restitution—demonstrating that the end of formal empire did not erase its profound and ongoing influence on both former colonies and the Hexagon.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book reveals how French imperialism was built on extractive economies—from Caribbean sugar plantations dependent on enslaved labor to West African rubber and Indochina rice/opium systems that tied colonial labor to global commodity chains and metropolitan finance.
  • It examines the 'civilizing mission' as both ideological justification and practical tool of rule, showing how education, medicine, and infrastructure projects served colonial extraction while promising progress and cultural transformation.
  • Resistance forms a continuous thread, from enslaved people's maroon communities and sabotage to 20th-century nationalist movements like the Viet Minh and FLN that challenged French rule through political organizing, strikes, and armed struggle.
  • The analysis demonstrates constant negotiation between metropole and colonies, with metropolitan policies (like the Code Noir or postwar French Union) shaped by colonial resistance, local realities, and the persistent tension between reform and repression.
  • It explores enduring imperial legacies in postwar France, including migration from former colonies, debates over museums and monuments, and economic instruments like the CFA franc that maintained ties long after formal independence ended.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students, scholars, and educated general readers interested in colonial history, French imperialism, postcolonial studies, and the economic foundations of empire. It will particularly benefit those researching resistance movements, decolonization processes, or the lasting impacts of colonialism on contemporary France and the francophone world. Readers seeking to understand how metropolitan policies and colonial experiences interacted across centuries will find its integrated approach valuable.

Author:

Victoria Hawkins

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 20, 2026

Word Count:

81,219 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 41 minutes

Sample:

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7 ratings