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Kommunikative Aspekte kolonial- und globalgeschichtlicher Konstellationen treten zunehmend in den Fokus der Sprachwissenschaft und anderer geisteswissenschaftlicher Disziplinen, die auf Quellen als empirischer Grundlage angewiesen sind. Die Edition des Bremer Bandkatalogs „Kolonialwesen“ (1884–1919) entspricht dem Quellendesiderat insbesondere für diskursorientierte Ansätze in Linguistik, (Post)Colonial Studies, Geschichts- und Sozialwissenschaften. Der archivalische Charakter eines systematischen bibliothekarischen Bandkatalogs bietet einen aus der historischen Sammlungspraxis gewonnenen und von aktuellen Fragestellungen nicht vordeterminierten Zugang zu Präferenzen der Fixierung kolonialer Diskurse. Fachwissenschaftliche Einleitungen kommentieren die Edition aus sprach-, geschichts- und bibliothekswissenschaftlichen Perspektiven. Mit der Edition, einer Kooperation von Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Bremen und dem Exzellenzprojekt „Language in Colonial Contexts“ der Universität Bremen, liegt ein Beitrag vor, der Datenzugänge herstellt – eine zentrale Aufgabe der (Post)Colonial Linguistics. The edition of the Bremen Book Catalogue on “Colonialism” provides access to an important source of German colonial history by means of facsimile reproductions, introductory texts, commentaries and indexes. It is the result of a cooperation of the Bremen research project “Language in Colonial Contexts” and Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Bremen.
Library catalogs --- Germany --- Colonies --- Colonial Discourse. --- German Colonial History.
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Tourist attractions constitute the metaphorical 'heart' of tourism. This book aims to both deconstruct and construct what tourist attractions are, how we perceive them and how we can enhance our understanding of what attracts us as tourists. The volume reaches beyond current ideas about the ways tourist attractions are created, shaped and packaged. It focuses on the importance and subjective nature of identity, memory, narrative and performance in the tourist experience to find new ways of analysing and managing tourist attractions. The book will appeal to researchers and students in tourism and destination management and heritage and indigenous tourism.
Tourism --- Tourists --- Psychological aspects --- Psychology --- Sightseers --- Travelers --- Psychological aspects. --- Deconstructing Tourist Attractions. --- Destination Management. --- Indigenous Studies. --- Narrative Analysis. --- Phenomenology. --- Post-colonial Discourse. --- Tourist / Visitor Attraction.
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American national self-invention is fundamentally entwined with cultural constructions of American "prehistory" - the human presence on the continent since the earliest arrivals at least 16,000 years ago. Embattled Excavations offers exemplary readings of the entanglements between reconstructions of the American deep past and racialist ideologies and legal doctrine, with continental expansionism and Manifest Destiny, and with the epistemic and spiritual crisis about the origins of mankind following nineteenth-century discoveries in the fields of geology and evolutionary biology. It argues, from a decolonial perspective, that popular assumptions about the early history of settlement effectively downplay the length and intensity of the Indigenous presence on the continent. Individual chapters critically investigate modern scientific hypotheses about Pleistocene migrations; they follow in the tracks of imperial and transatlantic adventurers in search of Maya ruins and fossil megafauna; and they triangulate colonial and transcultural reconstructions of the events leading to the formation of Crater Lake (Oregon) with previously ignored Indigenous traditions about the ancient cataclysm. The examples show a deep-seated colonial anxiety about America's foreign pre-colonial past, evinced by popular archaeology's nervous silencing of Indigenous knowledge - a condition now subject to revision due to a growing Indigenous presence in the discursive field.
American Studies --- New American Studies --- American Isthmus --- settler colonial studies --- history of science --- postcolonial studies --- decolonial studies --- Colonialism --- colonial discourse analysis --- ciritical empire studies --- Fossils --- Archaeology --- 16./17. Jahrhundert --- Archäologie --- 18./19. Jahrhundert --- American Studies; New American Studies; American Isthmus; settler colonial studies; history of science; postcolonial studies; decolonial studies; Colonialism; colonial discourse analysis; ciritical empire studies; Fossils; Archaeology
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Laura Chrisman's Colonial Discourse and Postcolonial Theory: A Reader was published in 1993. It quickly became a landmark of postcolonial studies. This timely new book offers insights into the field she helped establish. Both polemical and scholarly, Postcolonial contraventions is challenging in its analysis of black Atlantic studies, colonial discourse analysis and postcolonial theory.She provides important new paradigms for understanding imperial literature, Englishness, and black transnationalism. Her concerns range from the metropolitan centre of Conrad's Heart of Darkness, to fatherhood in Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folk; from the marketing of South African literature to cosmopolitanism in Chinua Achebe; from utopian discourse in Benita Parry to Frederic Jameson's theorisation of empire.Chrisman also critically engages with postcolonial intellectuals Paul Gilroy, David Lloyd, Anne McClintock, Edward Said, Gayatri Spivak and Robert Young, uncovering conservatism from unexpected quarters. The book joins a growing chorus of materialist voices within postcolonial studies, and addresses an urgent need for greater attention to the political, historical and socio-economic elements of cultural production.This book will be of interest to students, researchers and teachers of postcolonial studies, theory and literature; black diaspora and Atlantic studies; imperialism and Victorian literature of empire, and British literature of the nineteenth century.
Decolonization. --- Sovereignty --- Autonomy and independence movements --- Colonization --- Postcolonialism --- Englishness. --- Heart of Darkness. --- South African literature. --- black Atlantic studies. --- black transnationalism. --- colonial discourse analysis. --- cosmopolitanism. --- imperial literature. --- postcolonial theory. --- utopian discourse.
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Nuevas perspectivas sobre etnicidad, género, subjetividad europea, y construcción de geografías coloniales. El discurso colonial en textos novohispanos se apoya en trabajos recientes sobre el análisis del discurso y la crítica de la representación que se están desarrollando en áreas como antropología, historia, y geografía cultural. Al analizar una gran variedad de textos, tales como el Diario de Colón, la Lettera de Vespucio, el Alboroto y motín de Sigüenza y Góngora, el México en 1554 de Cervantes de Salazar, la Grandeza mexicana de Balbuena, y la Historia antigua de México de Clavijero, traza los orígenes y usos del saber geopolítico desde la época clásica hasta el siglo XVIII novohispano, para aportar nuevas perspectivas sobre etnicidad, género, subjetividad europea, y construcción de geografías coloniales. Este libro mira los movimientos de ideas más allá de las fronteras espaciales y temporales, e identifica la percepción europea del cuerpo americano como un cuerpo abyecto, que desestabiliza el sistema, la identidad y el orden, y explora la relación del cuerpo y del espacio como una continuidad de las prácticas y las representaciones estratégicas del discurso colonial, enfocándose en la construcción de la identidad, y en las definiciones de las fronteras físicas y culturales. Este estudio va más allá de las lecturas previas, y sugiere nuevas direcciones para el análisis e interpretación de la espacialidad, corporalidad y agencia en la America española colonial. SERGIO RIVERA-AYALA es profesor en la Universidad de California, Riverside.
Eurocentrism --- Colonists --- Ethnocentrism --- Human geography --- Attitudes. --- Mexico --- History --- Anthropo-geography --- Anthropogeography --- Geographical distribution of humans --- Social geography --- Anthropology --- Geography --- Human ecology --- Cultural relativism --- Ethnopsychology --- Nationalism --- Prejudices --- Race --- Settlers (Colonists) --- Persons --- Eurocentricity --- Agency. --- Colonial America. --- Colonial discourse. --- Colonial geography. --- Colonial identity. --- Corporeality. --- Cultural boundaries. --- Discurso colonial. --- Ethnicity. --- European perception. --- Gender. --- Geopolitics. --- Novohispanos. --- Spanish America. --- Spatiality. --- Subjectivity.
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Seers featured prominently in ancient Greek culture, but they rarely appear in archaic and classical colonial discourse. Margaret Foster exposes the ideological motivations behind this discrepancy and reveals how colonial discourse privileged the city's founder and his dependence on Delphi, the colonial oracle par excellence, at the expense of the independent seer. Investigating a sequence of literary texts, Foster explores the tactics the Greeks devised both to leverage and suppress the extraordinary cultural capital of seers. The first cultural history of the seer, The Seer and the City illuminates the contests between religious and political powers in archaic and classical Greece.
Prophets --- Oracles, Greek. --- Religion and politics --- History. --- Hero --- Greece --- Colonies. --- ancient greece. --- ancient greek politics. --- ancient world. --- antiquity. --- archaic greece. --- archaic. --- classical greece. --- classical world. --- classical. --- colonial discourse. --- colonial. --- colonialism. --- culture. --- delphi. --- divination. --- greek culture. --- greek politics. --- hellenistic period. --- ideological. --- ideology. --- literary analysis. --- literary texts. --- oracle. --- politics. --- religion. --- religious studies. --- seercraft. --- seers.
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Ultimately, Justice in a New World offers both a deeper understanding of the transformation of notions of justice and law among settlers and indigenous people, and a dual comparative study of what it means for laws and moral codes to be legally intelligible. Europeans and natives appealed to imperfect understandings of their interlocutors' notions of justice and advanced their own conceptions during workaday negotiations, disputes, and assertions of right. Settlers' and indigenous peoples' legal presuppositions shaped and sometimes misdirected their attempts to employ each other's law. Natives and settlers construed and misconstrued each other's legal commitments while learning about them, never quite sure whether they were on solid ground. Chapters explore the problem of "legal intelligibility": How and to what extent did settler law and its associated notions of justice became intelligible--tactically, technically and morally--to natives, and vice versa? To address this question, the volume offers a critical comparison between English and Iberian New World empires. Chapters probe such topics as treaty negotiations, land sales, and the corporate privileges of indigenous peoples. . A historical and legal examination of the conflict and interplay between settler and indigenous laws in the New WorldAs British and Iberian empires expanded across the New World, differing notions of justice and legality played out against one another as settlers and indigenous people sought to negotiate their relationship. In order for settlers and natives to learn from, maneuver, resist, or accommodate each other, they had to grasp something of each other's legal ideas and conceptions of justice.This ambitious volume advances our understanding of how natives and settlers in both the British and Iberian New World empires struggled to use the other's ideas of law and justice as a political, strategic, and moral resource. In so doing, indigenous people and settlers alike changed their own practices of law and dialogue about justice. .
Indians --- Colonies --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- History. --- Law and legislation. --- United States --- Amazon basin. --- Andean litigants. --- Bacon’s Rebellion. --- British settlers. --- Cockacoeske. --- Columbian elites. --- English justice. --- English law. --- Iberian New World. --- Indian law. --- Indian rights. --- Iroquois. --- John Wompas. --- Latin America. --- Nipmuc. --- Portuguese colonists. --- Spanish colonization. --- Spanish law. --- Spanish policy. --- Virginia House of Burgesses. --- Virginia law. --- agricultural leases. --- autonomy. --- blood feud. --- colonial discourse. --- colonial rule. --- communal rights. --- community identities. --- conversion. --- corporate autonomy. --- empire. --- ground law. --- historical actors. --- imperial legalities. --- indigenous groups. --- indigenous litigants. --- indigenous peoples. --- jurisdiction. --- justice. --- land rights. --- land transactions. --- legal concepts. --- legal contest. --- legal practices. --- legal structures. --- legal system. --- legal systems. --- liberal elites. --- local alliances. --- queen of Pamunkey. --- rhetorical traditions. --- sovereignty. --- strategic behavior. --- treaty negotiations. --- tributary system. --- vassalage.
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The book addresses the relationship between the literary representations of North Greenland and the Inughuit people in Knud Rasmussen’s expedition accounts The New People and My Travel Diary and the historical process of Danish colonization of North Greenland. The aim of reading both works is to demonstrate the ambivalence in representing North Greenland and the Inughuit, and, through this, to prove the existence of common mechanisms and cultural practices connected to mapping of the Other in a situation of asymmetric power relations. Applying a textual approach founded on colonial discourse analysis, the reading proves that literary mappings of geography and identity can never be stable, as they are in the state of constant transformation, perpetually recontextualized and reinvented.
Inuit. --- Explorers --- Rasmussen, Knud, --- Thule Expedition. --- Greenland --- Discovery and exploration --- Danish. --- Discoverers --- Navigators --- Voyagers --- Adventure and adventurers --- Heroes --- Discoveries in geography --- Innuit --- Inupik --- Eskimos --- Rasmussen, Knud Johan Victor, --- Grønland --- Groenlandia --- Grenlandii︠a︡ --- Groilandia --- Grænland --- Groenland --- Kalaallit Nunaat --- Gruntland --- Engronelant --- Engroneland --- Gronlandia --- Grēneland --- Qrenlandiya --- Chhen̳-tē --- Грэнландыя --- Hrėnlandyi︠a︡ --- Grenland --- Greunland --- Гренландия --- Гренланди --- Grenlandi --- Калааллит Нунаат --- Grónsko --- Ynys Las --- Lasynys --- Haʼaʼaahjí Hakʼaz Dineʼé Bikéyah --- Grónlandska --- Gröönimaa --- Γροιλανδία --- Gronlando --- Grenlando --- Grienlân --- Ghraonlainn --- Greenlynn --- Çheer y Sniaghtey --- Grenlandia --- Гринлэндин Арл --- Grinlėndin Arl --- 그린란드 --- Gŭrinlandŭ --- Akukittut --- גרינלנד --- Grinland --- Goronulande --- Grenlande --- Grenlandija --- Groenlandi --- Гренланд --- Groentlālpan --- Gruunlaand --- グリーンランド --- Gurīnrando --- Greenlun --- Griinland --- Verdi-lande --- Гренландий --- Grenlandiĭ --- Gröönland --- Gronelândia --- Groelândia --- Groenlanda --- Kalalit Nunat --- Grunlandya --- Gräinlound --- Groenlannia --- Grynlandyjo --- Grönlanti --- Lupanlunti --- Ґренландія --- Groenlaand --- גרינלאנד --- Grínlándì --- Grenlandėjė --- 格陵兰 --- Gelinglan --- Kalâtdlit-Nunât --- Accounts --- Arctic discourses --- Colonial discourse --- Danish literature --- ekspedycji --- Expedition --- Greenlandic Other --- Grenlandii --- Knud --- Knuda --- Kopernika --- Lubowicka --- Mapping --- Mikołaja --- Naukowe --- North --- Północnej --- Postcolonial theory --- Rasmussen --- Rasmussena --- relacjach --- Representation theory --- Representations --- Reprezentacje --- sercu --- Thule --- Ultima --- Uniwersytetu --- Wydawnictwo
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