ABSTRACT
For a long time, Europe’s colonizing powers justified their urge for expansion with the conviction that they were ‘bringing civilization to territories where civilization was lacking.’ This doctrine of white superiority and indigenous inferiority was accompanied by a boundless exploitation of local labor. Under colonial rule, the ideology that later became known as neoliberalism was free to subject labor to a capitalism tainted by racialized policies. This political economy has now become dominant in the Western world, too, and has reversed the trend towards equality. In Colonialism, Capitalism and Racism, Jan Breman shows how racial favoritism is no longer contained to ‘faraway, indigenous peoples’, but has become a source of polarization within Western societies as well.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |12 pages
Prologue: The Formative Impact of Childhood: Life Experiences in a Comparative Setting of Time and Space
part I|40 pages
Imperialism, Its Ideology and Practice of Racial Inequality
part II|69 pages
The Coolie Scandal on Sumatra's East Coast
part III|97 pages
Civilization and Racism
part IV|107 pages
Political Advocacy of the Multinational State
part V|59 pages
Development Aid as the Postcolonial Codex of Globalized Capitalism
