Imperial Subjects

This book PDF is perfect for those who love History genre, written by Martin Aust and published by Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar which was released on 28 October 2015 with total hardcover pages 514. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related Imperial Subjects books below.

Imperial Subjects
Author : Martin Aust
File Size : 40,8 Mb
Publisher : Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar
Language : English
Release Date : 28 October 2015
ISBN : 9783412501617
Pages : 514 pages
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Imperial Subjects by Martin Aust Book PDF Summary

***Angaben zur beteiligten Person Depkat: Studium der Geschichte, Germanistik und Anglistik an den Universitäten Bonn, Eugene (Oregon, USA) und Göttingen.

Imperial Subjects

***Angaben zur beteiligten Person Depkat: Studium der Geschichte, Germanistik und Anglistik an den Universitäten Bonn, Eugene (Oregon, USA) und Göttingen.

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Imperial Subjects

This highly original work posits that the changes in the nature of citizenship caused by neoliberal globalization must be understood as the result of an ongoing imperial project. Although they may seem admirable, policies such as humanitarian and citizenship rights are really an imperial venture led by global institutions and

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Imperial Subjects

In colonial Latin America, social identity did not correlate neatly with fixed categories of race and ethnicity. As Imperial Subjects demonstrates, from the early years of Spanish and Portuguese rule, understandings of race and ethnicity were fluid. In this collection, historians offer nuanced interpretations of identity as they investigate how

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Beyond Imperial Aesthetics

Observing that the division between theory and empiricism remains inextricably linked to imperial modernity, manifest at the most basic level in the binary between “the West” and “Asia,” the authors of this volume re-examine art and aesthetics to challenge these oppositions in order to reconceptualize politics and knowledge production in

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Imperial Citizenship

This is the first book-length study of the ideological foundations of British imperialism in the early twentieth century by focussing on the heretofore understudied concept of imperial citizenship.

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   Discoveries     Explorations and the Imperial Survey

India and the subcontinent stimulated the curiosity of the British who came to India as traders. Each aspect of life in India - its people, customs, geography, climate, fauna and flora - was documented by British travelers, traders, administrators, soldiers to make sense to the European mind. As they 'discovered'

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The British Imperial Century  1815   1914

This book provides a concise overview of the British Empire from its origins in the early nineteenth century, to its climax at mid-century, to its denouement on the eve of World War I. Considering the impact of imperial rule on subject peoples, Parsons explores the themes of cross-cultural social and

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Roman Imperial Identities in the Early Christian Era

Through the close study of texts, Roman Imperial Identities in the Early Christian Era examines the overlapping emphases and themes of two cosmopolitan and multiethnic cultural identities emerging in the early centuries CE – a trans-empire alliance of the Elite and the "Christians." Exploring the cultural representations of these social identities,

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