On Home Ground: Settling Land and Domesticating Difference in the “Non-Settler” Colonies of Burma and Cambodia

TitleOn Home Ground: Settling Land and Domesticating Difference in the “Non-Settler” Colonies of Burma and Cambodia
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsEdwards, Penny
JournalJournal of Colonialism and Colonial History
Volume4
Issue3
Date Published01/2004
Abstract

The term 'settler colony' or 'settler colonialism' is generally now understood to embrace Algeria, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and North America and to exclude British India, French Indochina, and the Dutch East Indies. In this essay [the author wants] to rupture the binary of 'settler colonies' versus' non-settler' colonies by looking at the gendered rhetoric of mobility and stability that straddled various colonized domains. Specifically, [the author focuses] on the French Protectorate of Cambodge (1863-1954) and British Burma (1885-1947).

URLhttps://muse.jhu.edu/article/50776
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