The nationalist Welsh colony in Patagonia, Y Wladfa, offers a peripheral vantage point from which to reconsider core assumptions about settler colonialism and the British World. Taking a fresh approach to settler colonial studies, this article both pays close attention to settler motives before embarkation and also analyses the case from a global perspective. It foregrounds the role of unequal power relations in Britain, the British World, and the global arena in shaping social relations at home and in the colony, as well as locating Y Wladfa within a constellation of Welsh sites and influences around the world. Analysis reveals the Welsh to occupy a complex position within such global hierarchies, and to be colonizing Patagonia from a colo...
In the spring of 2013 ten students from the University of North Carolina Wilmington participated in ...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
The papers collected in this special issue are significant. Collectively they provide a genealogical...
The nationalist Welsh colony in Patagonia, Y Wladfa, offers a peripheral vantage point from which to...
This article discusses the colonial encounter of the Welsh and Tehuelche/Mapuche in the Welsh colony...
This article explores the ‘myth of friendship’ between the Welsh and indigenous communities of Patag...
The present article will explore how globalization and its economic implications have resulted in th...
How might analysis of Argentina, its history and social relations, complicate and enrich our underst...
Note:The study focusses on the Welsh agricultural colony established in southern Argentina in the se...
This thesis explores the role played by Welsh-language newspapers in y Wladfa (the Welsh settlement ...
This article seeks to bring into question some of the assumptions that lie behind what constitutes ‘...
The thesis places Wales within a postcolonial framework, and uses postcolonial theory to analyse the...
One hundred and fifty-one Welsh Patagonians migrated to Australia between 1910 and 1916. A similar n...
In a future of uncertain climatic conditions, possibly characterised by more frequent extreme events...
© 2000 Dr. Robert Llewellyn TylerThe colony of Victoria, in the decades following the discovery of g...
In the spring of 2013 ten students from the University of North Carolina Wilmington participated in ...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
The papers collected in this special issue are significant. Collectively they provide a genealogical...
The nationalist Welsh colony in Patagonia, Y Wladfa, offers a peripheral vantage point from which to...
This article discusses the colonial encounter of the Welsh and Tehuelche/Mapuche in the Welsh colony...
This article explores the ‘myth of friendship’ between the Welsh and indigenous communities of Patag...
The present article will explore how globalization and its economic implications have resulted in th...
How might analysis of Argentina, its history and social relations, complicate and enrich our underst...
Note:The study focusses on the Welsh agricultural colony established in southern Argentina in the se...
This thesis explores the role played by Welsh-language newspapers in y Wladfa (the Welsh settlement ...
This article seeks to bring into question some of the assumptions that lie behind what constitutes ‘...
The thesis places Wales within a postcolonial framework, and uses postcolonial theory to analyse the...
One hundred and fifty-one Welsh Patagonians migrated to Australia between 1910 and 1916. A similar n...
In a future of uncertain climatic conditions, possibly characterised by more frequent extreme events...
© 2000 Dr. Robert Llewellyn TylerThe colony of Victoria, in the decades following the discovery of g...
In the spring of 2013 ten students from the University of North Carolina Wilmington participated in ...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
The papers collected in this special issue are significant. Collectively they provide a genealogical...