'Nicholas Thomas's book ... is at once a useful introduction to, and sustained critique of, some of the orthodoxies current where colonial and cultural studies meet.' <i>African History</i> <p>'<i>Colonialism's Culture</i> deserves a place in the modern critical canon alongside such classics as Johannes Fabian's <i>Time and the Other.'</i> <i>Peter Mason</i></p> <p>'There are many interesting facets to this book. To the extent that it helps lead to a honed political vision of colonial culture, and not in the opposite direction, it will make an important contribution.' <i>Progress in Human Geography</i></p> <p>'A trenchant critique of prevailing theories of colonialism.' <i>Environment and Planning</i></p> <p>'Bold, different and stimulating.' <i>Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory</i></p>
Preface.
Introduction.
1. From Present to Past: the Politics of Colonial Studies.
2. Culture and Rule: Theories of Colonial Discourse.
3. From Past to Present: Colonial Epochs, Agents, and Locations.
4. Colonial Governmentality and Colonial Conversion.
5. Imperial Triumph, Settler Failure.
6. The Primitivist and the Postcolonial.
Colonialism's Culture offers a wide-ranging account of the development of ideas about human difference and otherness, and of the conflict-ridden expression of these ideas in colonial projects at particular times. Thomas draws examples from the texts of eighteenth-century anthropology, nineteenth-century missionaries and colonial administration, and novelists of colonialism such as John Buchan. He shows that colonial culture was not some homogenous ideology that dominated the colonized, but an array of discourses with their own internal tensions and contradictions.
By reviewing debates about colonial culture and developing an innovative set of arguments, this book provides a stimulating introduction to a challenging field.