Archive for the ‘Scholarship and insights’ Category

Kevin Murray’s take on the Institute of Postcolonial Studies-hosted ‘Here from elsewhere’ symposium, here. The evening was fantastic; and the scholars, as well as the chairman, facilitated brilliant discussion. Well done to the IPCS.


American Historical Review: James Belich’s book is useful not just for scholars comparing settler societies but for everyone working on nineteenth-century North America or Australasia. Belich tells a compelling story about economic colonialism in the nineteenth century. In the process, he provides a remarkably accessible synthesis of recent historiography describing economic development in a region […]


Gray H. Whaley, Oregon and the Collapse of Illahee: U.S. Empire and the Transformation of an Indigenous World, 1792-1859 (University of North Carolina Press, 2009) Modern western Oregon was a crucial site of imperial competition in North America during the formative decades of the United States. In this book, Gray Whaley examines relations among newcomers […]


Samar Attar, Debunking the Myths of Colonization: The Arabs and Europe (University Press of America, 2010) Debunking the Myths of Colonization examines Salman Rushdie’s thesis on the paradoxical nature of colonialism and its horrific impact on the psyche of the colonized. It probes Frantz Fanon’s theories concerning the relationship between colonizers and colonized, and attempts […]


Jaap Jacobs, The Colony of New Netherland: A Dutch Settlement in Seventeenth-Century America (Cornell UP, 2009). The Dutch involvement in North America started after Henry Hudson, sailing under a Dutch flag in 1609, traveled up the river that would later bear his name. The Dutch control of the region was short-lived, but had profound effects […]


Peter Limb, Norman Etherington and Peter Midgley, ed., Grappling with the Beast: Indigenous Southern African Responses to Colonialism, 1840-1930 (Brill, 2010) This volume contributes rich, new material to provide insights into indigenous responses to the colonial empires of Great Britain (South Africa, Swaziland, Botswana, Zimbabwe (Rhodesia)) and Germany (Namibia) and explore the complex intellectual, cultural, […]


Jamie Allison, ‘Hamas, Gaza and the blockade’, International Socialism, 128 (13 October 10) No abstract; here are clippings: It is Hamas’s insistence on the Palestinian right to resist the occupation and their refusal to negotiate terms that will perpetuate it that earns the organisation the enmity of Israel and the Western powers. How did Hamas […]


Renisa Mawani, ‘”Half-breeds,” racial opacity, and geographies of crime: law’s search for the “original” Indian’, Cultural Geographies October 17,  4 (2010 ) Abstract: Discussions of hybridity have proliferated in cultural geography and in social and cultural theory. What has often been missing from these accounts are the ways in which mixed-race identities have been forged, […]


Alexandra Harmon, Rich Indians: Native People and the Problem of Wealth in American History (UNC Press, 2010). Long before lucrative tribal casinos sparked controversy, Native Americans amassed other wealth that provoked intense debate about the desirability, morality, and compatibility of Indian and non-Indian economic practices. Skillfully blending social, cultural, and economic history, Alexandra Harmon examines […]


Julie Bonello, ‘The Development of Early Settler Identity in Southern Rhodesia: 1890-1914′, International Journal of African Historical Studies 43, 2 (2010). introductory paragraph: White settlement in Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, is little more than a century old, yet its development is a significant and exceptional episode in the complex history of colonial Africa. Like many […]