The Statistical Table as Colonial Knowledge
In: Itinerario: international journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 51-73
Abstract
The statistical table is one expression of the settler colonial capacity and willingness to enumerate colonized "peoples" as "populations." By examining four tables—from 1763, 1828, 1848, and 1850—in Canada, New Zealand, and Australia this paper illustrates the emergence of this powerful technique of representation during the same a period in which European states were developing their capacity to represent the social in statistical terms. In the colonial context, the rise of the notion of a "population" whose characteristics could be averaged contributed to the specifically administrative eclipse of native sovereignty, paralleling the jural/political demise of native sovereignty.
Problem melden