128 Pages
by
Routledge
126 Pages
by
Routledge
126 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This book forms part of the scholarly rejection of the ‘experts’ of empire and calls for us to centre our understanding of colonial praxis upon the lives of the colonised peoples of the past and the present. Western publics are constantly being told by ‘experts’ that they ought to rethink the history of empire. They are told that their (presumed) guilt regarding their countries’ imperial pasts... Read more
Introduction 1. Naming the suffering of victims in the French conquest of Algeria 2. Palestine sine tempore 3. Where does colonialism come from? 4. The making of the Congo question: truth-telling, denial and ‘colonial science’ in King Leopold’s commission of inquiry on the rubber atrocities in the Congo Free State (1904–1905) 5. The lexical violence of imperial culture
Biography
William Gallois is Associate Professor of Middle Eastern and Mediterranean History at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter, UK. His publications include Time, Religion and History (2007), The Administration of Sickness: Medicine and Ethics in Nineteenth-Century Algeria (2008), and A History of Violence in the Early Algerian Colony (2013).






