@inbook{7e5bcbbeff044a888d33c582c4a75ed7,
title = "'A Considerable Effect': Winston Churchill and Wilfrid S. Blunt's Legacy",
abstract = "By the 1880s, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt had become {\textquoteleft}the avatar for anti-imperial causes{\textquoteright} and an active force for the {\textquoteleft}regeneration of Islam{\textquoteright} by means of {\textquoteleft}agitation and negotiation as well as by poetry and horse breeding.{\textquoteright} It is odd then to think that such an anti-imperialist would inadvertently provide a blueprint for British colonial administrators to restructure the Middle East after the First World War. Despite Blunt{\textquoteright}s historical role as an intellectual bridge between liberal Arab thinkers and nationalists and the British imperial policy-making elite, studies of his influence have remained confined to the literary world. This is because Blunt is often cast as an anti-Kipling often representing a voice of dissent to British Imperial policies in his poems and travel literature. But, this overtly literary understanding of Blunt{\textquoteright}s work alone has significantly overlooked his political commentary (often published in periodicals) and social influence with British policymakers and early Arab nationalists. This omission most likely owes to a legacy of historians dismissing Blunt as a ridiculous and eccentric political radical (especially after 1900), who exaggerated the sway of his ideas. However, given the current geopolitical environment of the collapse of the {\textquoteleft}Arab Spring,{\textquoteright} and the rise of {\textquoteleft}ISIS,{\textquoteright} a re-evaluation of Blunt{\textquoteright}s influence and ideas on British imperial policy in the Middle East is required. Prophetically, Blunt wrote that the British government had undermined his work in The Future of Islam, by {\textquoteleft}adopting{\textquoteright} it and {\textquoteleft}using it for its own purposes.{\textquoteright} Thoroughly utilizing the Blunt papers, letters, essays and diaries, this paper will explore Blunt{\textquoteright}s influence on the political class in Britain during the Victorian and Edwardian eras. By revealing Blunt{\textquoteright}s social network with major figures in British Middle Eastern policy like Winston Churchill, Gertrude Bell, T.E. Lawrence and H. St. John Philby, this paper will illustrate how Blunt{\textquoteright}s anti-imperial ideas were co-opted and used for British imperial aims in the Middle East. It will also explore how Blunt{\textquoteright}s anti-imperial message was adopted by early Arab nationalists such as Muhammad Abduh and Jamal al-Afghani",
keywords = "politics, diplomatic relations, military cooperation, British Empire, imperial control, knowledge transfer, cultural exchange, colonisation, Ottoman Empire, decolonization, nineteenth century, twentieth century, Islam, muslims, North Africa",
author = "Warren Dockter",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-24509-2_6",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783030245085",
series = "Britain and the World",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
editor = "Olmstead, {Justin Quinn}",
booktitle = "Britain in the Islamic World",
address = "Switzerland",
}