19世纪和20世纪东南亚殖民地港口城市

Donna Brunero
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引用次数: 0

摘要

东南亚的殖民地港口经常取代亚洲早期的贸易中心,到19世纪,许多港口在欧洲帝国网络中发挥了重要作用,使它们不仅成为地区枢纽,而且成为全球网络的重要枢纽。这些港口包括英国管理的新加坡海峡殖民地、槟城、马六甲(现在更常被称为马六甲);荷兰管理的巴达维亚、三宝垄和望加锡(爪哇海);法属西贡;西班牙人(后来的美国人)管理马尼拉(在南中国海)。重要的是,其中一些港口在早期的历史上曾是贸易中心,但在19世纪和20世纪达到了与全球网络连接的高峰。这些殖民地港口城市不仅是贸易和旅客的枢纽,而且是连接海上中心与港口腹地的人民和经济的门户或帝国桥头堡,将它们吸引到全球(帝国)经济中。殖民地港口的经济、政治和技术框架加强了欧洲人的控制。殖民地港口城市还在知识流通和技术引进方面发挥了作用,改变了交通和生产方式以及城市规划。东南亚的殖民地港口城市在欧洲在该地区利益的战略防御方面也很重要。港口城市被视为技术和殖民资本主义的入口,通常以欧洲美学和设计元素为模型,也可以成为城市发展和规划的场所。居住区、民族居住区和商业区的发展塑造了亚洲殖民地港口的形态。殖民地港口城市社区经常被视为文化交流和融合的重要场所。这些港口城市通常建在现有的土著贸易中心或渔村上。港口城市本质上是世界性的,对贸易散居者的运动开放,不仅是商业社区的入口,而且在19世纪见证了欧洲殖民地行政人员、科学家、作家和旅行者在港口之间不断增加的流动。另一个重要的涌入是东南亚港口的劳工(罪犯、契约劳工和自由人)。到20世纪初,殖民地港口成为新的知识分子和社会潮流的聚集地,其中包括反殖民主义情绪,这在一定程度上是由新闻和媒体的流通以及散居社区的影响和利益所驱动的。第二次世界大战后,许多殖民地港口被恢复为国家港口。通过沿着一些主题探索东南亚的殖民地港口城市,可以理解为什么学者们经常将殖民地港口城市描述为连接港口和港口社区(和经济)与欧洲帝国计划和全球经济的“连接力量”(或桥头堡)。对东南亚殖民地港口城市的考察为学者们提供了跨越众多历史领域的可能性,包括但不限于帝国历史、东南亚历史、海事历史、城市和社会文化历史、经济和劳工历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Southeast Asia’s Colonial Port Cities in the 19th and 20th Centuries
Southeast Asia’s colonial ports often supplanted early trading emporiums within Asia, and by the 19th century a number of ports played important roles in European imperial networks, making them significant hubs not only regionally but also in global networks. Such ports included the British-administered Straits Settlement of Singapore, Penang, Malacca (now more commonly referred to as Melaka); the Dutch-administered Batavia, Semarang, and Makassar (in the Java Sea); the French-administered Saigon; and the Spanish (later American) administered Manila (in the South China Sea). Importantly, some of these ports had earlier histories as trading emporiums, but reached a highpoint of connectivity with global networks in the 19th and 20th centuries. These colonial port cities were not only hubs for trade and travelers but served as gateways or imperial bridgeheads connecting maritime centers to the peoples and economies of the port hinterlands, drawing them into a global (imperial) economy. The economic, political, and technological frameworks in colonial ports served to reinforce European control. Colonial port cities also played a role in knowledge circulations and the introduction of technologies, which changed transport and modes of production and urban planning. The colonial port cities of Southeast Asia were also important in terms of the strategic defense of European interests in the region. Regarded as entry points for technology and colonial capitalism, and often modeled with elements of European aesthetics and design, port cities could also be sites of urban development and planning. The development of residential enclaves, ethnic quarters, and commercial districts served to shape the morphology of the colonial ports of Asia. Colonial port city communities were oftentimes regarded as important sites of cultural exchange and hybridity. These port cities were often built on existing indigenous trading centers or fishing villages. Cosmopolitan in nature, and open to the movement of trading diasporas, port cities served as entry points for not only commercial communities, but in the 19th century saw the increased movement of European colonial administrators, scientists, writers, and travelers between ports. Another important influx was labor (convict, indentured, and free) throughout Southeast Asia’s ports. By the early 20th century, colonial ports were sites of new intellectual and social currents, including anticolonial sentiment, in part driven by the circulation of news and press and also, by diasporic community influences and interests. Following World War II, many colonial ports were revived as national ports. By exploring the colonial port cities of Southeast Asia along a number of themes it is possible to understand why scholars have often described the colonial port city as a “connecting force” (or bridgehead) linking ports and port communities (and economies) to the European imperial project and the global economy. An examination of the colonial port city of Southeast Asia offers scholars the potential to bridge numerous historical fields including, but not restricted to, imperial history, Southeast Asian history, maritime history, urban and sociocultural histories, and economic and labor histories.
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