European University Institute Library

Liberals and the empire responses to French expansionism under Napoleon III in Algeria, Cochinchina and Mexico (c. 1858–70), Miquel de la Rosa Lorente

Label
Liberals and the empire responses to French expansionism under Napoleon III in Algeria, Cochinchina and Mexico (c. 1858–70), Miquel de la Rosa Lorente
Language
eng
Abstract
This thesis investigates liberal responses to French expansionism during Napoleon III’s Second Empire, focusing on three of its main imperialist ventures in the late 1850s and the 1860s: Algeria, a colony inherited from the times of Charles X, whose colonisation received a great boost in the 1860s; Cochinchina, the main step of France’s imperialism towards Asia; and Mexico, Napoleon III’s personal dream for France in America, started as the alleged greatest project of the Empire which, however, ended in great failure. The focus of this study is not on individuals generally acknowledged as main liberal thinkers, politicians or philosophers but on a group of less-celebrated individuals who developed their professional activity both in parliament (the Corps législatif) and the press. The aim is to highlight how liberal languages and discourses in their specific context contributed to the development and the shaping of liberal thinking and political culture in the 1860s with regard to imperial expansionism. This dissertation seeks to tie in with the historiographical trend which sees intellectual and political history not as distinct fields, but as two inseparable sides of the same coin. In a period in which the Second Empire was experiencing a process of increasing internal liberalisation in a number of political, social and economic fields, the Empire’s means of repression and social control were still active. Censorship was commonplace in 1860s France, making it very difficult for those opposing the regime to express their ideas and concerns. However, thanks to several steps made towards opening up the regime politically from 1860 onwards, opposition deputies - including especially the liberals - were able to express in parliament their claims and objections. Whereas some social issues remained difficult to tackle, I argue that liberals found in the Empire’s imperialist endeavours an appropriate space to channel their dissatisfaction with the Bonapartists’ way of conceiving, ruling and managing the country. The Second Empire’s colonial project on all continents fostered an intense ideological debate that transcended the borders of a simple partisan confrontation. It rather revealed the existence of two political cultures in quest of social legitimation: liberal and Bonapartist
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-313)
resource.dissertationNote
Thesis (Ph. D.)--European University Institute (HEC), 2017.
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Liberals and the empire responses to French expansionism under Napoleon III in Algeria, Cochinchina and Mexico (c. 1858–70)
Nature of contents
theses
Oclc number
1088492671
resource.otherEventInformation
Defence date: 5 June 2017
Responsibility statement
Miquel de la Rosa Lorente
Series statement
EUI PhD thesesEUI theses
Content
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