Dissolving the colour line: L. T. Hobhouse on race and liberal empire

European Journal of Political Theory 23 (1):85-106 (2024)
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Abstract

L. T. Hobhouse (1864–1929) is most familiar today as a leading theorist of British new liberalism. This article recovers and examines his overlooked commentary on the concept and rhetoric of race, which constituted part of his better-known project of advancing an authoritative account of liberal doctrine. His writings during and after the South African War, I argue, represent a prominent effort to cast liberalism as compatible with both imperial rule and what he called ‘the idea of racial equality’. A properly liberal empire, he asserted, would dissolve the colour line. This article traces the arguments Hobhouse advanced to make this claim, and explores his motivations for doing so. I contend that Hobhouse drew on the idiom of race as a form of exclusionary rhetoric, to delegitimise rival accounts of liberal empire and to cast his own as properly cosmopolitan. This recovery, I suggest, offers payoffs for our understanding of both Hobhouse's political thought and, more broadly, the uses of ‘race’ in twentieth-century liberalism.

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A Turn to Empire.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (2).
Imperialism: A Study.J. A. Hobson - 1968 - Science and Society 32 (1):100-104.
[Book review] the racial contract. [REVIEW]Charles W. Mills - 1997 - Social Theory and Practice 25 (1):155-160.
The Simian Tongue. The Long Debate about Animal Language.Gregory Radick - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (4):780-783.

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