38 research outputs found

    Zigeuner/Tziganes/Zingari

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    ‘The Swiss of All People!' Politics of Embarrassment and Dutch Imperialism around 1900

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    This case study of Swiss scientists in the Dutch East Indies offers a new approach to Dutch imperialism in Southeast Asia around 1900. It argues that one of the reasons for the Dutch to ‘round off’ their Empire was a fear of embarrassment in front of ‘foreign’ European countries. Adopting a Bourdieuean view on the role of emotions for collective action, I argue that fear of embarrassment was part of the Dutch imperial habitus, given the rather weak position of this relatively small country in the ‘imperial game’. On the level of concrete historical actors, fear of embarrassment is simultaneously seen as a resource that journalists, scientists, missionaries, colonial officers and local rulers could exploit in the pursuit of competing agendas within the Dutch Empire

    Switzerland, Borneo and the Dutch Indies: Towards a New Imperial History of Europe, c.1770–1850

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    When Switzerland was created in 1848, one of its founding fathers went by the name of ‘Borneo Louis’. Before becoming a Swiss state builder, he had served as a mercenary in the Dutch East Indies. There he had founded a family with his native ‘housekeeper’, Silla. In Switzerland, he continued to benefit from Silla’s exploited labour. Stories such as these seem unusual today, not for historical but for historiographical reasons. Borneo Louis was only one of c.70,000 mercenaries from all over Europe in Dutch imperial services. Silla was one of the countless ‘native concubines’ who were forced to support these men and thereby help the Dutch build their nineteenth-century empire in South East Asia. Other empires, too, depended on auxiliary services from Europeans hailing from regions with intra-European or short-lived empires, or none at all. Recent new imperial histories, however, have remained conceptually limited to the study of interconnections within national empires (mostly the British Empire). Pan-European dimensions of colonial histories have continued to lie outside their focus. Explaining how Switzerland became part of the Dutch imperial project, this article therefore calls for a renewed new imperial history: a history that explains how Europe emerged out of continuous connections across the boundaries of national empires
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