Entertainment in an Age of Revolutions, 1760-1800

The period following the Seven Years’ War should have been one of national consolidation and imperial dominance. The defeat of the French seemed to consolidate British dominance over Atlantic trade and lay the groundwork for territorial empire in South Asia. Instead it became an era of imperial fragmentation and national crisis. As part of an ill-advised plan to pay off the debts incurred during the Seven Years’ War by taxing the American colonies, the British government set into motion the first successful act of decolonization in the Atlantic World. Because the narrative of the American Revolution is so familiar it is difficult to fully appreciate how confusing these events were to Britons at the time. Most Britons viewed the residents of the 13 colonies as brethren, and the colonists’ resistance to British colonial policy was carried out on terms largely derived from British political theory. When rebellion came it called into question the very foundations of British cultural and social identity. The Ministry’s failure to comprehend the difficulty in reconquering the colonies after they had declared independence may well have been a refusal to recognize a historical bifurcation in Britishness itself.

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