ABSTRACT

Colonialism: A Global History interprets colonialism as an unequal relationship characterised by displacement and domination, and reveals the ways in which this relationship has been constitutive of global modernity.

The volume focuses on colonialism’s dynamism, adaptability, and resilience. It appraises a number of successive global colonial ‘waves’, each constituting a specific form of colonial domination, each different from the previous ones, each affecting different locales at different times, and each characterised by a particular method of exploiting colonised populations and territories. Outlining a succession of distinct colonising conjunctures, and the ways in which they ‘washed over’ what is today understood as the ‘Global South’, shaping and reshaping institutions and prompting diverse responses from colonised communities, Colonialism: A Global History also outlines the contemporary relevance of this unequal relation. Overall, it provides an original definition of colonialism and tells the global history of this mode of domination’s evolution and reach.

The broad chronological and geographical scope makes this volume the ideal resource for all students and scholars interested in globalisation, colonialism, and empire.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Approaching Colonial Phenomena

chapter 2|18 pages

The Atlantic Slave Trade

chapter 3|18 pages

The Mercantilist Colonial Empires

chapter 4|19 pages

Empire by Settlers – The Third Wave

chapter 8|15 pages

The Japanese Colonial Empire, 1868–1945

chapter 9|16 pages

Decolonisation

Conceded or Conquered?

chapter |20 pages

Conclusion

Colonial Legacies – Underdevelopment and Postcolonial Violence