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Karl Ittmann, "Fuelling Empire: The British Imperial Oil Complex, 1886-1945" (Oxford UP, 2025)

Oct 14, 2025
Karl Ittmann, a historian specializing in the British Empire, dives into his book detailing the rise of the British imperial oil industry, which dominated 20% of global reserves by 1939. He discusses how British companies intertwined their interests with colonial administration, akin to quasi-states, leveraging military and political power. Ittmann highlights labor strife fueled by exploitative practices and the profound impacts of imperialism on global oil. He further examines the shift from British control to local ownership post-decolonization and the cultural legacies that endure today.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Roots In Gulf Coast Oil

  • Karl Ittmann grew up and lived on the Gulf Coast, which sparked his interest in oil history.
  • He also worked with oil historians at the University of Houston while researching this book.
INSIGHT

Empire Built An Overseas Oil Industry

  • The British built the second-largest Western oil industry without domestic oil by relying entirely on overseas resources.
  • This forced oil policy to be inseparable from imperial control and global networks.
INSIGHT

Workers Are Absent From Archives

  • Colonial archives often erase or ignore indigenous and migrant oil workers, making recovery of their histories difficult.
  • Reconstructing these labor histories requires reading between administrative records.
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