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Empire, Colony, Genocide: Conquest, Occupation, and Subaltern Resistance in World History

✍ Scribed by A. Dirk Moses (editor)


Publisher
Berghahn Books
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Leaves
533
Series
War and Genocide; 12
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


In 1944, Raphael Lemkin coined the term “genocide” to describe a foreign occupation that destroyed or permanently crippled a subject population. In this tradition, Empire, Colony, Genocide embeds genocide in the epochal geopolitical transformations of the past 500 years: the European colonization of the globe, the rise and fall of the continental land empires, violent decolonization, and the formation of nation states. It thereby challenges the customary focus on twentieth-century mass crimes and shows that genocide and “ethnic cleansing” have been intrinsic to imperial expansion. The complexity of the colonial encounter is reflected in the contrast between the insurgent identities and genocidal strategies that subaltern peoples sometimes developed to expel the occupiers, and those local elites and creole groups that the occupiers sought to co-opt. Presenting case studies on the Americas, Australia, Africa, Asia, the Ottoman Empire, Imperial Russia, and the Nazi “Third Reich,” leading authorities examine the colonial dimension of the genocide concept as well as the imperial systems and discourses that enabled conquest. Empire, Colony, Genocide is a world history of genocide that highlights what Lemkin called “the role of the human group and its tribulations.”

✦ Table of Contents


Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
Section I: Intellectual History and Conceptual Questions
Chapter 1: Empire, Colony, Genocide: Keywords and the Philosophy of History
Chapter 2: Anticolonialism in Western Political Thought: The Colonial Origins of the Concept of Genocide
Chapter 3: Are Settler-Colonies Inherently Genocidal? Re-reading Lemkin
Chapter 4: Structure and Event: Settler Colonialism, Time, and the Question of Genocide
Chapter 5: “Crime without a Name”: Colonialism and the Case for “Indigenocide”
Chapter 6: Colonialism and Genocides: Notes for the Analysis of the Settler Archive
Chapter 7: Biopower and Modern Genocide
Section II: Empire, Colonization, and Genocide
Chapter 8: Empires, Native Peoples, and Genocide
Chapter 9: Serial Colonialism and Genocide in Nineteenth-Century Cambodia
Chapter 10: Genocide in Tasmania: The History of an Idea
Chapter 11: “The aborigines…were never annihilated, and still they are becoming extinct”: Settler Imperialism and Genocide in Nineteenth-century America and Australi
Chapter 12: Navigating the Cultural Encounter: Blackfoot Religious Resistance in Canada (c. 1870-1930)
Chapter 13: From Conquest to Genocide: Colonial Rule in German Southwest Africa and German East Africa
Chapter 14: Internal Colonization, Inter-imperial Conflict and the Armenian Genocide
Chapter 15: Genocidal Impulses and Fantasies in Imperial Russia
Chapter 16: Colonialism and Genocide in Nazi-occupied Poland and Ukraine
Section III: Subaltern Genocide
Chapter 17: Genocide from Below: The Great Rebellion of 1780-82 in the Southern Andes
Chapter 18: The Brief Genocide of the Eurasians in Indonesia, 1945/46
Chapter 19: Savages, Subjects, and Sovereigns: Conjunctions of Modernity, Genocide, and Colonialism
Select Bibliography
Contributors
Index


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