Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial Archive

Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial Archive

Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial Archive

Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial Archive

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Overview

Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism provides an in-depth study of the relationships between archives, knowledge and power. Exploring a diverse range of examples and surveying the now substantial scholarly literatures on the functions and scope of the ‘imperial archive’, it facilitates a deeper understanding of the challenges of working with a range of specific source genres within imperial and colonial archives.

Covering the late eighteenth century to the present day and drawing on material from a range of modern empires including those established by Britain, France, the Netherlands, Spain and the United States, chapters discuss themes such as the emergence of photography as an archival tool, the use of oral history in histories of colonialism and the ways in which the state informs the archive and vice versa. This book considers the ways in which newer ways of thinking about the past have challenged more traditional views of ‘the archive’, provoking questions about what archives are and where their conceptual, geographical and chronological boundaries lie.

Examining a wide selection of source material including government papers, censuses, petitions and case files and providing both an overarching introduction to the subject and close analysis of specific case studies, this book will be essential reading for students of imperial and colonial history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351986625
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 03/27/2017
Series: Routledge Guides to Using Historical Sources
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 212
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Kirsty Reid was a senior lecturer in history at the University of Bristol, UK, for many years. In 2011 she moved home to the north of Scotland and became part of the team at the Centre for History at the University of the Highlands and Islands. She now lives and works in northern Scotland. Her research has primarily focused on convict transportation and unfree labour within the British Empire. She is the author of Gender, Crime and Empire: Convicts, Settlers and the State in Early Colonial Australia (Manchester, 2007) and co-editor with Fiona Paisley of Critical Perspectives on Colonialism: Writing the Empire from Below (London, 2014).

Fiona Paisley is a cultural historian at Griffith University, Australia. She works on progressive debates concerning the reform of settler colonialism in the first half of the twentieth century. Her recent books are The Lone Protestor: AM Fernando in Australia and Europe (Canberra, 2012) and Glamour in the Pacific: Cultural Internationalism and Race Politics in the Women’s Pan-Pacific (Honolulu, 2009). Her current projects include a study of internationalism in the Pacific and Australian public opinion, and anti-slavery discourse and settler colonialism in interwar Australia.

Table of Contents

List of figures

List of contributors

Introduction
Kirsty Reid and Fiona Paisley

PART I

1 – Democratising the photographic archive
Jane Lydon

2 – Archival detours: sourcing colonial history
Penny Edwards

3 – Decolonizing the archives: a transnational perspective
Victoria Haskins

PART II

4 – Archiving Algeria: power, violence and secrecy
Abdelmajid Hannoum

5 – Colonial knowledge and subaltern voices: the case of an official enquiry in mid-nineteenth-century Java
G. Roger Knight

6 – Making people countable: analyzing paper trails and the imperial census
Alexandra Widmer

PART III

7 – Institutional case files: insanity’s archive
Catharine Coleborne

8 – Gender, geopolitics and gaps in the records: women glimpsed in the military archives
Vera Mackie

9 – Entanglement of oral sources and colonial records
Maria Nugent

10 – Living empire
Fiona Paisley

Index

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