Fung Fellows Public Talk: Making Metropoles in Modern Empires: Core-Periphery Boundary Formation and Its Legacies

Feb 26
12:00PM to 1:30PM
Louis A. Simpson International Building, Room A71, Princeton, NJ 08544, United States
The definition of empire presupposes a relationship between a dominant core and peripheries. This talk turns the metropole into a conceptual and empirical puzzle, asking why, what, how and when questions about imperial and post-imperial cores (focusing mostly on the how questions). Do empires have to have a metropole? Why? How and when does a core form and a boundary emerge between it and a periphery? How is that boundary (spatial and symbolic) contested and when does it move? What are the long-term legacies of metropole boundary work? The talk will reference a range of historical cases of modern imperial overland and overseas expansion and contraction (18th-21st centuries) -- including the United States, French, British, Japanese, Ottoman, Russian, and Chinese empires -- in this attempt to lay the conceptual groundwork for a comparative and historical sociology of imperial metropoles. . . . . Co-sponsors: . . PIIRS . . Center for Collaborative History, Department of History --- Event Details: https://my.princeton.edu/rsvp?id=1954628