This essay brings together two problematics that have occupied a central position in recent scholarship on modern British empire-building: colonial knowledge and the history of intimacy. Thinking about the inter-relationship between close encounters of empire and the production of colonial knowledge is not really a leap of the imagination
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
This thesis examines complex intergroup processes as manifested in New Zealand’s governing discours...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136501/1/ae.1989.16.4.02a00030.pd
This collection of essays has its genesis in the conference 'Interracial Intimacies: New Zealand His...
This essay attempts to untangle a central conceptual and analytical knot in recent New Zealand histo...
While New Zealand historians have sometimes been influenced by the new imperial history, this increa...
There has been much rigorous questioning about the idea and practice of colonialism in current refle...
Historians have argued that while Māori were important players in founding and sustaining New Zealan...
In their speeches and writings, many British Victorian colonials raise concerns about the successful...
This article examines how contemporary legal discourse perpetuates and reproduces colonial structure...
The essays gathered together in this book explore the roles of the men and women who served the Brit...
The British men and women who lived in India to fulfil their imperial duties were known as the ‘Angl...
From the late sixteenth through the nineteenth century, Great Britain expanded across the globe buil...
New Perspectives on the History of Gender and Empire extends our understanding of the gendered worki...
Review of Christopher Bayly’s Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communicatio...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
This thesis examines complex intergroup processes as manifested in New Zealand’s governing discours...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136501/1/ae.1989.16.4.02a00030.pd
This collection of essays has its genesis in the conference 'Interracial Intimacies: New Zealand His...
This essay attempts to untangle a central conceptual and analytical knot in recent New Zealand histo...
While New Zealand historians have sometimes been influenced by the new imperial history, this increa...
There has been much rigorous questioning about the idea and practice of colonialism in current refle...
Historians have argued that while Māori were important players in founding and sustaining New Zealan...
In their speeches and writings, many British Victorian colonials raise concerns about the successful...
This article examines how contemporary legal discourse perpetuates and reproduces colonial structure...
The essays gathered together in this book explore the roles of the men and women who served the Brit...
The British men and women who lived in India to fulfil their imperial duties were known as the ‘Angl...
From the late sixteenth through the nineteenth century, Great Britain expanded across the globe buil...
New Perspectives on the History of Gender and Empire extends our understanding of the gendered worki...
Review of Christopher Bayly’s Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communicatio...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
This thesis examines complex intergroup processes as manifested in New Zealand’s governing discours...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136501/1/ae.1989.16.4.02a00030.pd