Exclusion and Inclusion
Engels
265

This book sets out to examine the internal workings of a colonial settler society drawing on aspects of post-colonial theory and whiteness studies. It focuses on the construction of a hierarchical social order in German Southwest Africa in the period 1884-1914. In doing so it explores the historical creation of categories of race and the construction of a concept of whiteness within white settler society in Germany¿s foremost settler colony. In the colonial environment the presence of some settlers was deemed to be more desirable than others. As a consequence policies of exclusion and racial rhetoric were employed to exclude undesirable settlers from white society. What emerged was a pioneer society in which undesirable settlers were socially, politically and economically excluded whilst desirable settlers sought to forge a racially and culturally exclusive utopia. Based on extensive archival material from the Bundesarchiv in Berlin as well as a wide range of printed sources, the book presents an insight into strategies of social control, power, the establishment of social privilege and constructions of whiteness in a settler society.

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  • : 9783039110605
  • : Engels
  • : Paperback
  • : 265
  • : augustus 2007
  • : 394
  • : 152 x 224 x 17 mm.
  • : Cultural Identity Studies
  • : Afrika; Afrikaanse geschiedenis; Duitsland; Duitsland: het tijdperk van het imperialisme (1890 - 1914); Europese geschiedenis; Literatuurtheorie; Nationale bevrijding en onafhankelijkheid, postkolonialisme; Regionale studies; Samenleving en cultuur: algemeen; Sociale en culturele geschiedenis; Vroeg 20e eeuw ca. 1900 tot ca. 1950