Thomas Babington Macaulay – Imperial man and national historian

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Public Lecture

Thomas Babington Macaulay –

Imperial man and national historian

To mark the 150th anniversary of the death of Thomas Macaulay,

Professor Catherine Hall will present a critical reassessment of

Macaulay at his birthplace, Rothley Temple, Leicestershire.

Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–59) poet, essayist, and Whig politician is now best remembered as the great nineteenth century historian of England but in this lecture Professor Hall will focus on the ways in which his ideas about empire, particularly India, and about race, critically informed his thinking about England and

Englishness. These ideas have important implications for current debates about race, ethnicity and 'the multicultural question'.

Catherine Hall is Professor of History at University College London. Her research focuses on re-thinking the relation between Britain and its empire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with particular emphasis on issues of gender, empire, colonialism and history writing.

Recent publications include Civilising Subjects: Metropole and colony in the English imagination, 1830-1867

(winner of the Morris D. Forkosch Prize of the American Historical Association); Cultures of Empire:

Colonizers in Britain and the empire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A reader.

Professor Hall is currently completing a book on Macaulay as historian.

When : Monday 7 th December 2009: 5.30 p.m.

Where: Rothley Court Hotel, Rothley, Leicestershire. LE7 7LG (Wilberforce Room)

Public transport: 127 Arriva bus from Leicester (St Margaret’s Bus Station) or Loughborough town centre. http://www.arrivabus.co.uk/serviceInformation.aspx?id=6121 .

Alternatively taxi from Leicester (six miles) or Loughborough (seven miles).

For directions see: http://www.rothleycourt.com/directions.htm

NB: As seating is limited please book before hand with Natalie Martin ( Csig@lboro.ac.uk

).

For further information please contact Csig@lboro.ac.uk (T:01509-222973) or Dr Robert Knight

(R.G.Knight@lboro.ac.uk).

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