
Empire, Incorporated
the corporations that built british colonialism
$49.57
- Paperback
408 pages
- Release Date
6 May 2025
Summary
Empire, Incorporated: How Corporations Forged the British Empire
A Spectator Book of the Year
“Brilliant, ambitious, and often surprising. A remarkable contribution to the current global debate about empire.” -William Dalrymple, author of The Anarchy: The East India Company, Corporate Violence, and the Pillage of an Empire
“Remarkable…The richness of detail and evidence that Stern…brings to his subject is [new]-as is the lucidity w…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9780674299290 |
---|---|
ISBN-10: | 0674299299 |
Author: | Philip J. Stern |
Publisher: | Harvard University Press |
Imprint: | Harvard University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Number of Pages: | 408 |
Release Date: | 6 May 2025 |
Weight: | 416g |
Dimensions: | 210mm x 140mm x 25mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
A landmark book…[a] bold reframing of the history of the British Empire. – Caroline Elkins * Foreign Affairs *British colonialism…Stern says, was conceived by investors, creditors, entrepreneurs, and, lest we forget, parvenus and embezzlers. This cast of men-on-the-make flourished alongside sovereigns and their ministers and produced what Stern calls ‘venture colonialism’—a form of overseas expansion that was driven by a belief that ‘the public business of empire was and had always been best done by private enterprise.’ The history of British colonialism is really the history of the joint-stock corporation. – Tunku Varadarajan * Wall Street Journal *Remarkable…The richness of detail and evidence that Stern…brings to his subject is [new]—as is the lucidity with which he organises his material over six long chapters that stretch from the mid-16th century almost to the present. – Linda Colley * Financial Times *Empire, Incorporated offers a refreshingly new take on British imperialism…[It] is a remarkably comprehensive account of how—from the reigns of Elizabeth I to Elizabeth II, and from some of the earliest plantation projects in Ireland to the Falklands War—corporations have played a defining role in the British Empire. – Dinyar Patel * Los Angeles Review of Books *[A] commanding history of British corporate imperialism…Stern avoids a trite parallelism that reduces chartered companies to the forerunners of modern multinationals. The East India Company didn’t just bow out to Apple or Tesla; instead, it has undergone a sort of resurrection…But it’s also possible to finish this book convinced that the British Empire has been just one phase in the pragmatic imagination of Anglophone capitalism. – Michael Ledger-Lomas * London Review of Books *The genius of Empire, Incorporated lies in weaving a coherent narrative that is at once solid and lucid, explaining how corporations are structured and how they ended up ruling the world, creating empires…Scholarly, engaging, and entertaining. – Salil Tripathi * Mekong Review *An exceptionally well-written, comprehensive narrative of 400 years of British colonialism. – Gijs Dreijer * International Journal of Maritime History *Stern is a tireless researcher and an accomplished explainer of geopolitical and financial matters. This is a consequential reconsideration of the history of colonialism. * Publishers Weekly *Brilliant, ambitious, and often surprising. With great clarity and remarkable archival reach, Stern convincingly argues that it was joint-stock ‘venture colonialism’ that financed and drove the earliest attempts at establishing Tudor and Elizabethan colonies from Ulster to Spitsbergen, Virginia to ‘Cathay,’ and even a Puritan republic of the Bahamas. A remarkable contribution to the current global debate about empire and a small masterpiece of research and conceptual reimagining. – William Dalrymple, author of The Anarchy: The East India Company, Corporate Violence, and the Pillage of an EmpireThis is an extraordinary book of great erudition and vast scope. Stern has written the definitive work on how the British Empire was driven by the joint-stock company and the legal device of incorporation. This remarkable account of a dizzying number of corporations that drove imperial expansion will be unrivaled for many years to come. – Andrew Fitzmaurice, author of King Leopold’s Ghostwriter: The Creation of Persons and States in the Nineteenth CenturyStern has written the most important book on the history of the company in the English-speaking world in over a century. Empire, Incorporated is a gift for historians and general readers alike. Lawyers and investment bankers—always looking for the next clever idea to structure a deal or a new commercial entity—will delight in all the examples this book provides, and profit from the cautionary tales that abound. – Paul Halliday, author of Habeas Corpus: From England to Empire
About The Author
Philip J. Stern
Philip J. Stern is a historian of the British Empire and the author of the award-winning book The Company-State. He is Professor of History at Duke University.
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