This article draws on Edward Said's notion of 'imaginary geographies' to explore how representations of small island states enabled particular colonial interventions to take place in the Indian Ocean region and to show how these representations are currently being reworked to support development strategies. It examines how particular colonial imaginaries justified and legitimised spatially and temporally extended transactions before focusing on two examples of forced population movements: British colonial policy of forcibly exiling anti-colonial nationalists and political 'undesirables' from other parts of the empire to Seychelles; and the use of islands in the region as strategic military bases, requiring the compulsory relocation of popul...
Between 1829 and 1917, over 1.3 million men, women and children travelled from India to the sugar co...
Shaped by the intertwining effects of foreign imposition and local acculturation, the transformation...
This article addresses the question of how postcolonial islands retain specificity while engaging wi...
This article first considers the significance of historical experience in academic studies, includin...
The phenomenon of colonialism influenced the cultures, economies, and politics of the majority of th...
This article takes the “island” as a key trope in tourism studies, exploring how ideas of culture an...
No other type of territory has been so affected by the colonial endeavor as islands. Islands, espec...
This article explores in detail the legal structures and discursive framings informing the governanc...
This paper calls for the need to go beyond an understanding of oceans, seas and littoral spaces as m...
Copyright © 2017 Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History. This article explores the...
Research on Reunion Island would benefit from the methodological shift introduced by postcolonial st...
This article documents an attempt to decolonise our approach to methodology to explicitly show respe...
The essay begins with an exploration of how Henry Neville's fictional Isle of Pines (1668) plays thr...
Residents of the islands off Africa’s east coast are able to deal with stormy conditions. In 2019 al...
Lying in the geographic interstices of the much larger centre-periphery dynamics of Indian Ocean Rim...
Between 1829 and 1917, over 1.3 million men, women and children travelled from India to the sugar co...
Shaped by the intertwining effects of foreign imposition and local acculturation, the transformation...
This article addresses the question of how postcolonial islands retain specificity while engaging wi...
This article first considers the significance of historical experience in academic studies, includin...
The phenomenon of colonialism influenced the cultures, economies, and politics of the majority of th...
This article takes the “island” as a key trope in tourism studies, exploring how ideas of culture an...
No other type of territory has been so affected by the colonial endeavor as islands. Islands, espec...
This article explores in detail the legal structures and discursive framings informing the governanc...
This paper calls for the need to go beyond an understanding of oceans, seas and littoral spaces as m...
Copyright © 2017 Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History. This article explores the...
Research on Reunion Island would benefit from the methodological shift introduced by postcolonial st...
This article documents an attempt to decolonise our approach to methodology to explicitly show respe...
The essay begins with an exploration of how Henry Neville's fictional Isle of Pines (1668) plays thr...
Residents of the islands off Africa’s east coast are able to deal with stormy conditions. In 2019 al...
Lying in the geographic interstices of the much larger centre-periphery dynamics of Indian Ocean Rim...
Between 1829 and 1917, over 1.3 million men, women and children travelled from India to the sugar co...
Shaped by the intertwining effects of foreign imposition and local acculturation, the transformation...
This article addresses the question of how postcolonial islands retain specificity while engaging wi...