The Settler Complex: An Introduction
In: American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 1-22
Introduction
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In: American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 1-22
Introduction
"How race rose and spread across the globe Traces of History presents a new approach to race and to comparative colonial studies. Bringing a historical perspective to bear on the regimes of race that colonizers have sought to impose on Aboriginal people in Australia, on Blacks and Native Americans in the United States, on Ashkenazi Jews in Western Europe, on Arab Jews in Israel/Palestine, and on people of African descent in Brazil, this book shows how race marks and reproduces the different relationships of inequality into which Europeans have coopted subaltern populations: territorial dispossession, enslavement, confinement, assimilation, and removal. Charting the different modes of domination that engender specific regimes of race and the strategies of anti-colonial resistance they entail, the book powerfully argues for cross-racial solidarities that respect these historical differences"--
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In: Writing past colonialism
In: Settler colonial studies, Band 3, Heft 3-04, S. 257-279
ISSN: 1838-0743
In: American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 233-268
Reviews
In: American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Band 37, Heft 2, S. i-viii
Front matter
In: American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 1-46
In: American Indian culture and research journal, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 3-45
ISSN: 0161-6463
This article questions the singularity of the Palestine Nakba. It highlights some of the historical preconditions that enabled the Nakba to occur, revealing it to have been a consolidation rather than a point of origin. The preconditions that had equipped the Zionists for settlement before they first set foot in Palestine combined economic, technological, military, cultural and moral attributes that were the cumulative outcome of centuries of Eurocolonial history. The article introduces the concept of preaccumulation to characterise this complex historical endowment that settlers imported with them. The article also argues that the donors who funded the world Zionist project differed from the speculators who financed territorial expansion in other settler colonies in that they did not require a return on their investment. Unencumbered by the obligation to return a profit, Zionist settlers enjoyed the easiest of imported advantages in relation to the local population, a confounding of capitalist rationality that overwhelmed the limited set of resources available to Native Palestinians. Combining their unconditional funding with the ethnically exclusive strategy known as the Conquest of Labour, Zionists built up a contiguous zone of Jewish-only land on which to fashion their ethnocratic state-in-waiting in Mandate Palestine. Against this background, the article argues that the Nakba accelerated, albeit very radically, the 'slow-motion' means to Native dispossession that had been the only means available to Zionists while they were still building their colonial state.
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In: Settler colonial studies, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 133-171
ISSN: 1838-0743
In: Settler colonial studies, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 226-252
ISSN: 1838-0743
In: Settler colonial studies, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 13-51
ISSN: 1838-0743
In: Thesis eleven: critical theory and historical sociology, Band 100, Heft 1, S. 117-127
ISSN: 1461-7455, 0725-5136
In: Thesis eleven: critical theory and historical sociology, Band 100, Heft 1, S. 106-117
ISSN: 0725-5136
In: Journal of world history: official journal of the World History Association, Band 16, Heft 4, S. 502-505
ISSN: 1527-8050