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Elizabeth Donkin’s unlikely contribution to the making of a South African city

dc.contributor.authorRodrigues, Patricia
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-20T13:38:39Z
dc.date.available2020-08-20T13:38:39Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.description.abstractThis collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include, but are not limited to, historical battlefields, contemporary areas of political strife and fictional renderings of imperial conflicts. A re-consideration of imperial conflicts is particularly pertinent in the case of the British Empire, which established an extremely varied and complex world in time and space. In its first phase, the North American colonies performed an important role in establishing the Empire. It then reached its height between the end of the nineteenth century and World War I by means of military domination in India, Southeast Asia and Africa, expanding its influence after 1919 up to the process of de-colonization, which commenced from the middle of the twentieth century. With so many diverse cultures involved and the everchanging legitimate arguments proposed for colonialism, the British Empire created a vast volume of work of the most varied kind, including biographies and auto-biographies, travelogues, periodicals, political and economic essays, anthropological studies, paintings, sculptures, architecture, photography, poetry, stories and novels, all of which transmitted a plurality of voices with heterogeneous values and perspectives about the colonial experience. To understand the contentious nature of imperialism, in addition to exploring the concepts of Empire, colony, colonialism and imperialism, it is important to analyse these individual and collective experiences, including the arguments for the benign “European civilizing mission,” and the denunciation of covert economic interests. Another factor to be examined is the aggressive affirmation of British cultural superiority at the time, and the gradual consciousness-raising as to the value and legitimacy of different cultures conducive to dissonance, doubts and questions about the universality of the dominant culture and its manifestations. A third area of interest is the way in which the hierarchical social values in force in England at the time were transplanted to the colonies, and were subsequently transformed or maintained through political and domestic authority or were caught up in the collision between the attraction and repulsion towards other cultures.pt_PT
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionpt_PT
dc.identifier.citationRodrigues, P. (2014). Elizabeth Donkin’s unlikely contribution to the making of a South African city.In Reviewing Imperial Conflicts, 94-106. ISBN 978-1443854931pt_PT
dc.identifier.isbn978-1443854931
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.15/3039
dc.language.isoengpt_PT
dc.peerreviewedyespt_PT
dc.publisherCambridge Scholars Presspt_PT
dc.subjectbritish empirept_PT
dc.subjectSouth Africapt_PT
dc.subjectPort Elizabethpt_PT
dc.subjectElizabeth Donkinpt_PT
dc.titleElizabeth Donkin’s unlikely contribution to the making of a South African citypt_PT
dc.typebook part
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.conferencePlaceNewcastle upon Tynept_PT
oaire.citation.endPage106pt_PT
oaire.citation.startPage94pt_PT
oaire.citation.titleReviewing Imperial Conflictspt_PT
person.familyNameRodrigues
person.givenNamePatricia
person.identifier.ciencia-id0413-02BF-521E
person.identifier.orcid0000-0001-5513-5664
person.identifier.ridJ-7350-2017
rcaap.rightsrestrictedAccesspt_PT
rcaap.typebookPartpt_PT
relation.isAuthorOfPublicationf3b17553-ea38-41fd-82b4-a67a37df8122
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscoveryf3b17553-ea38-41fd-82b4-a67a37df8122

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