Primitive Liberals and Pirate Tribes: Black-Flag Radicalism and the Kibbo Kift
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Volume
46
Pagination
984 - 1008
Publisher
DOI
10.1080/03086534.2018.1519247
Journal
The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History
Issue
ISSN
0308-6534
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Age of Catastrophe (1914–1945) has long been considered a crisis of liberalism. As a political platform and moralistic worldview, the hollowness of liberalism’s promise was exposed when total war struck at the heart of Europe, undermining its presumption of imperial hegemony over much of the world. What emerged in its wake, amid the swells of irremediable nationalisms, is the subject of this article. Blinded by the fog of war and bright lights of modernity, historians often fail to catch the glimpses of alternative aspirations, which escaped the age’s ruptures so as to reinvent and redeem humanity from the depths of its bloody past. Against a backdrop of neglected case studies from Britain and elsewhere – from the Luddites to the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift – this article seeks to show how the spectre of death inspired new ideals of youth and civility that rejected the arrogance of imperial masculinity and industrialised oppression, turning instead to visions of global kinship that were socialist and anarchic, romantic and utopian, primitive and piratical.
Authors
LAYTON, SH; QUGANA, HCollections
- History [326]