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Metropolitan History of the Dutch Empire: Popular Imperialism in The Netherlands, 1850-1940 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 8 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Heritage and Memory Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463729917
  • ISBN-13: 9789463729918
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 8 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Heritage and Memory Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463729917
  • ISBN-13: 9789463729918
1. Diverse range of topics in an attempt to cross-cut the metropolitan imperial landscape. 2. Subjects not previously studies in an overtly imperial light in the Netherlands, such as the scouting movement. 3. Bridging national and international imperial historiographies. This book analyses popular imperial culture in the Netherlands around the turn of the twentieth century. Despite the prominent role that the Dutch empire played in many (sometimes unexpected) aspects of civil society, and its significance in mobilising citizens to participate in causes both directly and indirectly related to the overseas colonies, most people seem to have remained indifferent towards imperial affairs. How, then, barring a few jingoist outbursts during the Aceh and Boer Wars, could the empire be simultaneously present and absent in metropolitan life? Drawing upon the works of scholars from fields as diverse as postcolonial studies and Habsburg imperialism, A Metropolitan History of the Dutch Empire argues that indifference was not an anomaly in the face of an all-permeating imperial culture, but rather the logical consequence of an imperial ideology that treated ‘the metropole’ and ‘the colony’ as entirely separate entities. The various groups and individuals who advocated for imperial or anti-imperial causes – such as missionaries, former colonials, Indonesian students, and boy scouts – had little unmediated contact with one another, and maintained their own distinctive modes of expression. They were all, however, part of what this book terms a ‘fragmented empire’, connected by a Dutch imperial ideology that was common to all of them, and whose central tenet – namely, that the colonies had no bearing on the mother country – they never questioned. What we should not do, the author concludes, is assume that the metropolitan invisibility of colonial culture rendered it powerless.

Arvustused

"Kuipers characterization of patchy imperial enthusiasm bears profoundly on questions of colonial memory today. In this respect, Kuipers study adds important historical pretext to a growing scholarly and popular interest in the contemporary legacies of colonialism in the Netherlands. [ ...] by historicizing how notions of a strict metropole colony divide emerged in the Netherlands, Kuipers study leaves us much better equipped to challenge other inherited paradigms that cleave the study of the Dutch empire." - Chelsea Schields, BMGN Low Countries Historical Review, Vol. 138 (2023)

List of Abbreviations
9(2)
On Names and Terminology 11(2)
Introduction 13(24)
The Still Waters of Empire Run Deep Dutch Indifference
14(6)
The Metropole in the Colonial World
20(4)
Conquering the Metropolitan Mind
24(7)
The Politics of History
31(3)
Case Studies from a Fragmented Empire
34(3)
1 Food and Indifference
37(32)
A Cultural History of the Rijsttafel in the Netherlands Dichotomies of a Colonial Dish
43(7)
The Metropolitan Rijsttafel
50(4)
Who's Cooking?
54(3)
The Politics of Colonial Food
57(7)
The Limits of Permeation (Conclusion)
64(5)
2 Indonesians and Cultural Citizenship
69(48)
The Metropolitan Microcosm of Empire Dissent and Cultural Citizenship
71(7)
Wim Tehupeiory: Naturalization and Social Mobility
78(10)
Tjipto Mangoenkoesoemo: Political Dissent in the Metropole
88(14)
Jodjana: The Arts and the Idea of Association
102(11)
Imperial Citizenship and Double Consciousness (Conclusion)
113(4)
3 Schools and Propaganda
117(28)
History Books and Schools as Sites of Imperial Campaigns Schools, Teachers and Pupils
120(8)
History Lessons
128(6)
`Classroom Collections'
134(7)
Maps on the Wall (Conclusion)
141(4)
4 Scouting and the Racialized Other
145(34)
Imperial Tropes in the Dutch Scouting Movement The Advent of Dutch Scouting
151(7)
An Empire without Boys
158(3)
Imperial Imagery in Dutch Scouting
161(7)
The 1937 Jamboree
168(7)
Scouting and Dutch Imperialism (Conclusion)
175(4)
5 Missionary Organizations and the Metropolitan Public
179(32)
The `Inner Mission' and the Invention of Mission Festivals Internal Colonialism
182(5)
Mission Festivals
187(9)
The Choice of a Missionary Career
196(4)
Gendered Role Models
200(7)
Finding Funds (Conclusion)
207(4)
Conclusion
211(8)
A Fragmented Empire
219(1)
Sources
Archives and Libraries
219(1)
Published Primary Sources
220(3)
Published Secondary Sources
223(8)
Index 231
Dr. Matthijs Kuipers lectured on (post)colonial history, humanitarianism, human rights, and racism at Utrecht University and is now employed by Nationaal Comité 4 en 5 mei. He defended his PhD thesis on popular imperialism in the Netherlands in 2018 at the European University Institute in Florence and has published on topics ranging from colonial propaganda to the imperial dimension of the Dutch boy scouts.