Tag: Imperialism
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Rethinking a Contested Analytical Lens: The Evolution of Gender in Imperial Historiography

Since the 1970s, gender has been perceived as a crucial analytical lens. Angelina Castrucci provides a history, and critique, of a fixed framework of gender.
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The Nosy Neighbour: The United States and the Path to the Bolivian Revolution of 1952

The United States, despite attempting to distance itself from European imperialism, took part in a wider period of new imperialism, which notably saw the annexation of the Philippines, Hawai’i, and Cuba amongst others, creating an American pointillist empire. Aliya Okamoto Abdullaeva investigates US involvement in Bolivia.
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The Sykes-Picot Agreement: an ‘expansionist booking-in-advance’ of the Middle East

The Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 was written by Mark Sykes and François Georges-Picot. Jasmine Khelil examines how it came about and why.
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Migration and the Neocolonial ‘National Front’: British Post-war Immigration Policy and Culture

HMT Empire Windrush brought hundreds of migrants from Commonwealth countries with the promise of employment and prosperity; what greeted them was discrimination and racism. Ash Tomkins discusses the impact of Britain’s hostile post-war immigration policy, the effects of which are felt to this day.
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Through the Looking Glass: Photography and Imperialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

Written by Jack Bennett. The technology of photography has been deeply entangled with imperial expansion. However it has been a contested technology too and used by colonised peoples.
