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Richard Thurnwald and the Transimperial Fate of German Colonial Ethnology, 1896-1926
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- المؤلفون: Stoll, Viktor
- نوع التسجيلة:
Electronic Resource
- الدخول الالكتروني :
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/369090
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.109035
- معلومة اضافية
- Publisher Information:
University of Cambridge Faculty of History 2024-06-07T16:26:20Z 2023-05-05
- نبذة مختصرة :
This dissertation examines the transnational development of early twentieth century international social anthropology in the context of imperial rivalries, colonial governance, and liberal internationalism. In doing so, this project explores the internationalization of a "Lost Generation" of German ethnologists, exemplified by the renowned scholar Richard Thurnwald (1869-1954), from *fin de siècle* antecedents in Austro-Hungarian Bosnia to field research projects for Anglo-Australian mandate administrations in New Guinea during the interwar period. German ethnologists were at the forefront of a broader alignment of applied anthropology and colonialism in the West before World War One. After the brutal suppression of the Herero Rebellion in Southwest Africa (c. 1906), Germany faced rising international scrutiny over her capacity to economically develop her colonies while simultaneously executing the *mission civilisatrice* – the inherent contradiction within the concept of “Sacred Trusteeship” that I term the “Mandate Dilemma”. To head off this threat to its imperial legitimacy, Germany adopted a contemporarily unique policy of "scientific colonialism" which combined ethnological expertise with rational governance in pursuit of Sacred Trusteeship – an intellectual approach that I term “Mandate Governmentality” – to secure its right-to-rule against the imperial ambitions of its Great Power rivals. This convergence of necessities spurred a scientific revolution of a unique form of German colonial ethnology – of a distinct “Mandate *Ethnologie*”. Following the loss of their colonial laboratories in 1919, “imperial piggybacking” German ethnologists found ready employment throughout the Anglophone world as a “reservoir of knowledge” in a postwar liberal internationalist system that promoted indigenous self-determination. This "Lost Generation" of German Mandate Ethnologists became integral in guiding the implementation and expansion of Mandate Governmentality in interwar
- الموضوع:
- Availability:
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- Note:
application/pdf
English
- Other Numbers:
HS1 oai:www.repository.cam.ac.uk:1810/369090
1488841535
- Contributing Source:
UNIV OF CAMBRIDGE
From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
- الرقم المعرف:
edsoai.on1488841535
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