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Race and Realpolitik

The Politics of Colonisation in German Samoa

by Evelyn Wareham (Author)
©2002 Thesis 208 Pages
Series: Germanica Pacifica, Volume 1

Summary

German colonisation in Samoa from 1900 to 1914 was characterised by the interplay of conflicting definitions of race. The central question this study asks is to what extent, and in which ways, ideologies of race shaped German colonial policy in Samoa. It analyses the administration’s paternalist development policies, debates over white settlement, the introduction and treatment of indentured labourers, and the legal classification of mixed marriages and half-castes. The author argues that rather than uniting the colonising community in a racist mission of domination, racial thought amplified the fissures in German Samoa’s population and supported the administration’s Realpolitik.

Details

Pages
208
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631393802
Language
English
Keywords
kolonie colonisation africa
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 208 pp., 9 fig., 7 tab.

Biographical notes

Evelyn Wareham (Author)

The Author: Evelyn Wareham has an M.A. in History and a BA (Honours) in German and has worked as a freelance historical researcher and tutor at Victoria University of Wellington. She is a Senior Archives Analyst with the Statutory Regulatory Group at Archives New Zealand. In Fiji in August 1999, Wareham was elected Secretary General of the Pacific Regional Branch of the International Council on Archives (PARBICA). She has published and presented widely on German colonisation in Samoa, as well as on New Zealand and Pacific archival issues.

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Title: Race and Realpolitik