Reverberations of Empire: How the Colonial Past Shapes the Present

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Julian Go
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Modern colonialism from the eighteenth century onward encompassed most of the world’s surface. Today, the world is different. In theory at least, nation-states rather than empires and colonies are the global norm. The sorts of colonial conquests that mark earlier centuries appear to have ended. But does this mean colonialism in the past is not relevant for the present? Scholarly and popular discussions allude to the idea that past colonialism impacts the present, using a variety of terms like “legacies,” “imprints,” “vestiges,” “ruins,” or “afterlives.” Yet existing scholarship has yet to fully clarify and catalog the specific processes and mechanisms that connect colonial history with its putative legacies. This essay, based upon the 2022 Presidential Address to the Social Science History Association, identifies and discusses four such processes and mechanisms or “modes of reverberation”: (1) continued colonialism through simple reproduction, (2) the persistence of power through formal and informal institutionalization, (3) path dependent historical trajectories (or “colonial institutionalism”), and (4) colonialism’s archive of meaning.

帝国的回响:殖民地的过去如何塑造现在
18世纪以来的现代殖民主义覆盖了世界的大部分地区。今天,世界不同了。至少在理论上,民族国家而不是帝国和殖民地才是全球常态。标志着前几个世纪的殖民征服似乎已经结束。但这是否意味着过去的殖民主义与现在无关呢?学术和大众讨论暗示过去的殖民主义影响了现在,使用各种术语,如“遗产”、“印记”、“遗迹”、“废墟”或“来世”。然而,现有的学术研究尚未充分阐明和编目将殖民历史与其假定遗产联系起来的具体过程和机制。本文以2022年社会科学史协会主席演讲为基础,确定并讨论了四种这样的过程和机制或“回响模式”:(1)通过简单再生产持续的殖民主义,(2)通过正式和非正式制度化持续的权力,(3)路径依赖的历史轨迹(或“殖民制度主义”),以及(4)殖民主义的意义档案。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Social Science History seeks to advance the study of the past by publishing research that appeals to the journal"s interdisciplinary readership of historians, sociologists, economists, political scientists, anthropologists, and geographers. The journal invites articles that blend empirical research with theoretical work, undertake comparisons across time and space, or contribute to the development of quantitative and qualitative methods of analysis. Online access to the current issue and all back issues of Social Science History is available to print subscribers through a combination of HighWire Press, Project Muse, and JSTOR via a single user name or password that can be accessed from any location (regardless of institutional affiliation).
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