Department of History

Dr Onni Gust releases Unhomely Empire: On Whiteness and Belonging c.1760-1830

Book cover for 'Unhomely Empire' by Onni Gust, featuring a painting of two wealthy people holding hands with two children by their side.

Onni Gust, of the Department of History, has published a book with Bloomsbury. 

Unhomely Empire: Whiteness and Belonging, c.1760 - 1830

About the book

This book examines the role of Scottish Enlightenment ideas of belonging in the construction and circulation of white supremacist thought that sought to justify British imperial rule. During the 18th century, European imperial expansion radically increased population mobility through the forging of new trade routes, war, disease, enslavement and displacement. In this book, Onni Gust argues that this mass movement intersected with philosophical debates over what it meant to belong to a nation, civilization, and even humanity itself.

Unhomely Empire maps the consolidation of a Scottish Enlightenment discourse of 'home' and 'exile' through three inter-related case studies and debates; slavery and abolition in the Caribbean, Scottish Highland emigration to North America, and raising white girls in colonial India. Playing out over poetry, political pamphlets, travel writing, philosophy, letters and diaries, these debates offer a unique insight into the movement of ideas across a British imperial literary network. Using this rich cultural material, Gust argues that whiteness was central to 19th-century liberal imperialism's understanding of belonging, whilst emotional attachment and the perceived ability, or inability, to belong were key concepts in constructions of racial difference.

About the author

Dr Onni Gust is a cultural and intellectual historian of the British Empire in the 'long' eighteenth century (c. 1730-1830). Their work addresses questions of belonging and identity in the eighteenth-century British empire, with a particular interest in the development of ideas of race and gender.

You can purchase the book from Bloomsbury.

 

Posted on Thursday 1st April 2021

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