The cover of Africa and the Victorians portrays two rows of Englishmen, presumably the Cabinet or Members of Parliament, seated in front of a large, wooden desk, poring over documents scattered about the chamber. They look intellectually spent. One man, standing off to the side, holds a thick stack of papers and his hat; he just addressed his colleagues. He could represent the book’s authors, Ronald Robinson, John Gallagher, and Alice Denny, and the seated gentlemen, clearly with a lot of thinking left to do, are the their associates in academia. The authors have presented their new theory on the Scramble for Africa; the historians, examining the reams of archived documents presented in evidence, are digesting it.
For the theory is radical and the research fastidious: Robinson and Gallagher need a book to untangle their ideas, which left a mark on the study of history that remains indelible today. They propose that geostrategic considerations, not economic ones, drove the European powers into the Scramble, which occurred in the late Victorian era. By occupying Egypt in 1882 and engaging the Transvaal settlers in South Africa in the First Boer War in 1881, Britain sparked the Scramble.
Immediately, the thesis draws skepticism, for did not Britain engage in Egypt and south Africa for economic reasons? Were an ascendant Germany and a sore France prompted into empire only to counterbalance Britain, or would they have grasped at Africa in any case? The authors, limiting themselves to British archival evidence, point out that Britain’s Victorian-era governments acted to protect vital links to India, the Suez Canal and the Cape. Nationalist movements threatened the passageways, which were formerly under the passive, “informal” dominion of the Empire. Britain’s very reluctance to resort to costly conquest and occupation allowed the national movements to flourish, thereby paradoxically pulling Britain into these forms of command. The authors emphasize time and again that the “official mind” of the Cabinet saw little economic gain to be won in the dark continent, at least not until gold was discovered in the south.
Robinson, Gallagher, and Denny have written Africa and the Victorians with the density of a textbook, but none of the orthodoxy. They hew resolutely to their thesis, even when it stretches credulity. Still, the book makes for excellent reading for new students of late African empire, provided they follow it with a selection of critical analyses.