Networks beyond Empires

Networks beyond Empires
Author: Huei-Ying Kuo
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2015-08-24
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9789004281097

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In Networks beyond Empires, Kuo finds that Chinese speech-group ties were key to understanding diasporic businesses and nationalism. These transnational networks transformed the Hong Kong-Singapore corridor into a space autonomous from Chinese official nationalism and British as well as Japanese empires.

Beyond Empires Global Self Organizing Cross Imperial Networks 1500 1800

Beyond Empires  Global  Self Organizing  Cross Imperial Networks  1500 1800
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2016-06-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004304154

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Beyond Empires explores the complexity of empire building from the point of view of self-organized cooperative networks, rather than from the point of view of the central state.

Learning from Empire

Learning from Empire
Author: Poonam Bala
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2019-01-15
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9781527525566

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Internationalisation of medical knowledge, its circulation and implementation through colonial institutions have played a significant role in combating diseases of public health importance. With contributions from reputed faculty and researchers, this volume examines the dynamics of circulation of medical knowledge and the creation of webs of empire through medical curiosities, medical and architectural knowledge, medical manuscripts, African agency, medical ideas and management of diseases, surgical and anatomical knowledge and a collective scientific enterprise in translating ‘local’ to ‘universal’ paradigms of practice.

Networks of Empire

Networks of Empire
Author: Kerry Ward
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2009
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521885867

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In this book, Ward examines the Dutch East India Company's control of migration as an expression of imperial power.

Documenting Mobility in the Japanese Empire and Beyond

Documenting Mobility in the Japanese Empire and Beyond
Author: Takahiro Yamamoto
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2022-11-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789811663918

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This book tackles the question of border control in and around imperial Japan in the first half of the twentieth century, with a specific focus on its documentation regime. It explores the institutional development, media and literary discourses, and on[1]the-ground practices of documentary identification in the Japanese empire and the places visited by its subjects. The contributing authors, covering such regions as Korea, Manchuria, Taiwan, Siberia, Australia, and the United States, place the question of individual identity in the eyes of the respective governments in dialogue with the global developments of the identification and mobility control practices. The chapters suggest the importance of focusing more than previously on the narrative of individual identification, not as a tool for creating nation states but as a tool for generating, strengthening, and maintaining asymmetrical relationships between people of different socioeconomic backgrounds who moved in and out of empires. This book joins the effort in the recent scholarship in migration history to highlight experiences of migrants beyond the transatlantic world, and that in East Asian history to investigate the space and connections beyond the boundaries of the nation states. By bringing together the analyses on the trans-Pacific mobility and Japan’s imperial expansion and its aftermath in East Asia, it shows a complex interplay between state power and moving individuals, two forces whose relationships went far beyond simple competition.

Beyond Science and Empire

Beyond Science and Empire
Author: Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva,Thomás A. S. Haddad,Kapil Raj
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2023-09-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781000929089

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Through ten case studies by international specialists, this book investigates the circulation and production of scientific knowledge between 1750 and 1945 in the fields of agriculture, astronomy, botany, cartography, medicine, statistics, and zoology. In this period, most of the world was under some form of imperial control, while science emerged as a discrete field of activity. What was the relationship between empire and science? Was science just an instrument for imperial domination? While such guiding questions place the book in the tradition of science and empire studies, it offers a fresh perspective in dialogue with global history and circulatory approaches. The book demonstrates, not by theoretical discourse but through detailed historical case studies, that the adoption of a global scale of analysis or an emphasis on circulatory processes does not entail analytical vagueness, diffusionism in disguise, or complacency with imperialism. The chapters show scientific knowledge emerging from the actions of little-known individuals moving across several Empires—European, Asian, and South American alike—in unanticipated places and institutions, and through complex processes of exchange, competition, collaboration, and circulation of knowledge. The book will interest scholars and undergraduate and graduate students concerned with the connections between the history of science, imperial history, and global history.

Edge of Empire

Edge of Empire
Author: Fabrício Prado
Publsiher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2015-10-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520285163

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In the first decades of the 1800s, after almost three centuries of Iberian rule, former Spanish territories fragmented into more than a dozen new polities. Edge of Empire analyzes the emergence of Montevideo as a hot spot of Atlantic trade and regional center of power, often opposing Buenos Aires. By focusing on commercial and social networks in the Rio de la Plata region, the book examines how Montevideo merchant elites used transimperial connections to expand their influence and how their trade offered crucial support to Montevideo’s autonomist projects. These transimperial networks offered different political, social, and economic options to local societies and shaped the politics that emerged in the region, including the formation of Uruguay. Connecting South America to the broader Atlantic World, this book provides an excellent case study for examining the significance of cross-border interactions in shaping independence processes and political identities.

Empire and Beyond

Empire and Beyond
Author: Antonio Negri
Publsiher: Polity
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2008-12-31
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780745640488

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Today, Empire no longer has an outside: it no longer tolerates realities external to itself. Hence every war cannot but be a civil war, an internal battle, a domestic strife. But if the enemy is always within, militarization is part and parcel of normalization and every war necessarily appears as a policing operation. And yet has the sun really set on the old materialist dream of transforming social conflict into the beginnings of liberation? In the cracks of Empire one can discern an emergent capacity to remould the world. The anti-Empire is represented by the multitude, the collection of impassioned and desiring individuals whose potential for action offers the best hope for a better world. In this book Antonio Negri explains the key concepts and methods which he and Michael Hardt have used to analyse Empire and the new forms of power and counter-power that are shaping and reshaping our world today. Through five introductory lectures and several supporting texts Negri constructs a democratic discourse on globalization, renews the premises of a materialist analysis of social and political life and offers some glimpses of the future.