01985cam a2200277 a 450000100090000000300040000900500170001300800410003001000170007102000390008804000180012705000210014508200170016610000270018324501030021026000490031330000380036250400660040050509450046665000260141165000290143790600450146694200400151195201390155199900170169017607799OSt20240117123322.0130130s2013 nyua b 001 0 eng  a 2012046396 a9780823251803 (cloth : alk. paper) aDLCcDLCdDLC00aJC359b.A55 201300a325.3bAGN/H1 aAgnani, Sunil M.9998010aHating empire properly :bIndia, the Indies, and Enlightenment Anticolonialism /cSunil M. Agnani. aNew York :bFordham University Press,c2013. axxiii, 280 pages :bill. ;c24 cm aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [191]-265) and index.1 aPrologue: Enlightenment, colonialism, modernity -- Introduction: companies, colonies, and their critics -- Part I: Denis Diderot: the two Indies of the French Enlightenment -- 1. Doux commerce, douce colonisation: consensual colonialism in Diderot's thought -- 2. On the use and abuse of anger for life: ressentiment and revenge in the Histoire des deux Indes -- Part II: Edmund Burke: political analogy and Enlightenment critique -- 3. Between France and India in 1790: custom and arithmetic reason in a country of conquest -- 4. Jacobinism in India, Indianism in English Parliament: fearing the Enlightenment and colonial modernity with Edmund Burke -- 5. Atlantic revolutions and their Indian echoes: the place of America in Burke's Asia writings -- Reflections on the revolution in St. Domingue/Haiti -- Compensation in the East, or, From Virginia to Hindostan -- Epilogue. Hating empire properly: European anticolonialism at its limit. 0aImperialismxHistory. 0aImperialismxPhilosophy. a7bcbccorignewd1eecipf20gy-gencatlg 2ddccBKh325.3iAGN/Hk325.3mAGN/H 00102ddc40708SOCIAL SCIENCEaMESbMEScHISd2023-12-04l0o325.3 AGN/Hp44071r2023-12-04 10:48:29v895.00w2023-12-04yBKzGL42R1 c43888d43888