Pleading settlers: Darren Reid, ‘Letters to the Editor as Performative Imperial Citizenship: Settler Letters to British Newspapers in the late Nineteenth Century’, Britain and the World, 19, 1, 2026

05May26

Abstract: This article examines the role of letters to the editor in British newspapers as a medium for settlers in self-governing British colonies to perform imperial citizenship during the late nineteenth century. Analyzing a dataset of 125 letters from 1860–1900, it highlights how settlers used the participatory nature of the British press to navigate the economic, military, and political structures that remained under British influence after colonial self-governance. By leveraging British public opinion through these letters, settlers sought to address obstacles such as local governmental inefficiencies, unfavorable portrayals in the British press, and challenges from imperial policies and corporate power. The article problematizes historiographical distinctions between political and cultural imperial citizenship. It reveals the persistence of British influence in settler colonies through the guise of public opinion. It emphasizes the constraints imposed by class and editorial gatekeeping on who was afforded the opportunity to perform imperial citizenship through the participatory press. And it argues that letters to the editor were not only tools of individual agency but also windows into the complex and interwoven cacophony of lived experiences of empire within the late nineteenth-century settler colonies.