Read The Transformation of the World Online

Authors: Jrgen Osterhammel Patrick Camiller

The Transformation of the World (224 page)

BOOK: The Transformation of the World
8.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

  36
. Quoted in C. L. Brown,
Moral Capital
, p. 8.

  37
. The prolific work of Seymour Drescher has been especially influential in the formation of this consensus.

  38
. Carey,
British Abolitionism
.

  39
. D. B. Davis,
Inhuman Bondage
, p. 236.

  40
. Satre,
Chocolate on Trial
, pp. 77ff.

  41
. Keegan,
Colonial South Africa
, pp. 35f.

  42
. Dharma Kumar, “India,” in: Drescher and Engerman,
Historical Guide
, pp. 5–7.

  43
. Blackburn,
Overthrow
, p. 480; Bernecker,
Geschichte Haitis
, p. 69.

  44
. N. Schmidt,
L'Abolition de l'esclavage
, pp. 22ff.

  45
. Emmer,
Nederlandse slavenhandel
, pp. 205f.

  46
. See also, in a different perspective,
chapter 10
, above.

  47
. The precise figures are given in Berlin,
Generations of Captivity
, Appendix, Tab. 1.

  48
. Drescher,
From Slavery to Freedom
, pp. 276f.

  49
. See the overview in Stewart,
Holy Warriors
. On the most famous (though perhaps not most influential) white abolitionist, see H. Mayer,
All on Fire
.

  50
. As a way into the huge literature on Lincoln and slavery, see Oakes,
The Radical and the Republican
, esp. pp. 43ff.; Foner,
Fiery Trial
.

  51
. D. B. Davis,
Inhuman Bondage
, pp. 317f.

  52
. Zeuske,
Geschichte Kubas
, pp. 124 ff.; Schmidt-Nowara,
Empire and Antislavery
.

  53
. Viotti da Costa,
Brazilian Empire
, pp. 125–71; A. W. Marx,
Making Race
, p. 64.

  54
. Bernecker et al.,
Geschichte Brasiliens
, p. 210.

  55
. On slavery and Holocaust, see Drescher,
From Slavery to Freedom
, pp. 312–38.

  56
. Clarence-Smith,
Islam
, pp. 10f.

  57
. Ibid., pp. 100f.

  58
. Ibid., pp. 107f.

  59
. Ibid., p. 116.

  60
. Temperley,
White Dreams
.

  61
. Fundamental (though rather skeptical) on the possibilities of comparative slavery research is Zeuske,
Sklaven
, pp. 331–60. However, some authors such as Seymour Drescher have made very successful use of comparative methods.

  62
. See, e.g., F. Cooper,
Beyond Slavery
; and the important regional analyses in Temperley,
After Slavery
.

  63
. A key case study is R. J. Scott,
Degrees of Freedom
.

  64
. Stanley Engerman, “Comparative Approaches to the Ending of Slavery,” in: Temperley,
After Slavery
, pp. 281–300, at 288–90.

  65
. On the many strands of slavery in Africa, see the collective volume Miers and Roberts,
End of Slavery
, as well as F. Cooper et al.,
Beyond Slavery
, pp. 106–49 (on the significance of the year 1910 see p. 119).

  66
. This is emphasized in Berlin,
Generations of Captivity
, pp. 248–59.

  67
. Ibid., pp. 266f.

  68
. Keegan,
Colonial South Africa
finds them already before 1850, not only after the “mineral revolution.”

  69
. D. L. Lewis,
W.E.B. Du Bois
, p. 277.

  70
. Du Bois,
Writings
, p. 359. Thanks to Scaff,
Max Weber in America
, pp. 98–116, we now know that Max Weber, perhaps the greatest European observer of his time, was extraordinarily receptive to Du Bois's diagnosis.

  71
. The reasons for this development are still hotly debated. For a report on the controversies, see James Beeby and Donald G. Nieman, “The Rise of Jim Crow, 1880–1920,” in Bowles,
Companion
, pp. 336–47.

  72
. Fredrickson,
White Supremacy
, p. 197.

  73
. Winant,
The World Is a Ghetto
, pp. 103–5; A. W. Marx,
Making Race
, pp. 79, 178–90; Drescher,
From Slavery to Freedom
, pp. 146f.

  74
. R. J. Scott,
Degrees of Freedom
, pp. 253ff.

  75
. F. Cooper et al.,
Beyond Slavery
, p. 18.

  76
. Drescher,
Mighty Experiment
, pp. 158ff.; see also Holt,
Problem of Freedom
.

  77
. There is no adequate account of racism in the history of ideas, the closest to one being Mosse,
Final Solution
. A very brief introduction is Geulen,
Rassismus
.

  78
. Shimazu,
Japan, Race and Equality
; on the interpretation, see Lake and Reynolds,
Global Colour Line
, pp. 285–309.

  79
. Frank Becker, “Einleitung: Kolonialherrschaft und Rassenpolitik,” in idem,
Rassenmischehen
, pp. 11–26, at 13.

  80
. Christian Geulen, “The Common Grounds of Conflict: Racial Visions of World Order 1880–1940,” in: S. Conrad and Sachsenmaier,
Competing Visions
, pp. 69–96.

  81
. This is argued in detail in one of the great classics on the history of racist ideas: W. D. Jordan,
White over Black
. As so often, the influence of authors remains an open question. Did Long really represent “planters” or even “the British public”? Drescher,
From Slavery to Freedom
, p. 285, casts doubt on the latter.

  82
. Patterson,
Slavery and Social Death
, p. 61.

  83
. Roediger,
Working toward Whiteness
, p. 11; on the history of racial classification, see esp. Banton,
Racial Theories
and, for a very general survey, Fluehr-Lobban,
Race
, pp. 74–103.

  84
. Augstein,
Race
, p. xviii.

  85
. The dispute between Gobineau and Tocqueville in the 1850s elucidated the alternatives with unparalleled clarity. See Ceaser,
Reconstructing America
, ch. 6.

  86
. Banton,
Racial Theories
, pp. 54–59.

  87
. There is a good survey of nineteenth-century biological theories of race in Graves,
Emperor's New Clothes
, pp. 37–127.

  88
. Hannaford,
Race
, pp. 226f., 232f., 241.

  89
. Ballentyne,
Orientalism
, p. 44. Still fundamental are Poliakov,
Aryan Myth
; Olender,
Languages of Paradise
; Trautmann,
Aryans
.

  90
. Lorcin,
Imperial Identities
; Streets,
Martial Races
.

  91
. Hannaford,
Race
, pp. 348ff.

  92
. Lauren,
Power and Prejudice
, pp.44ff.; Gollwitzer,
Die gelbe Gefahr
; Mehnert,
Deutschland
; Geulen,
Wahlverwandte
, pt. 2.

  93
. D. B. Davis,
Inhuman Bondage
, p. 76.

  94
. See
chapter 8
, above.

  95
. L. D. Baker,
From Savage to Negro
, pp. 99ff.

  96
. Barkan,
Retreat of Scientific Racism
.

  97
. Torpey,
Invention of the Passport
, pp. 91f.

  98
. For a thorough account mainly focused on Europe, see Caplan and Torpey,
Documenting Individual Identity
.

  99
. Noiriel,
Immigration
, pp. 135ff.

100
. Gosewinkel,
Einbürgern
, pp. 325–27.

101
. For a broad overview, see Lake and Reynolds,
Global Colour Line
.

102
. See Reimers,
Other Immigrants
, pp. 44–70. Also Takaki,
Strangers
; Gyory,
Closing the Gate
; and, on the Chinese experience, E. Lee,
At America's Gates
.

103
. D. R. Walker,
Anxious Nation
, p. 98.

104
. A good account is Markus,
Australian Race Relations
.

105
. Jacobson,
Whiteness
.

106
. Jacobson,
Barbarian Virtues
, pp. 261f.

107
. Dikötter,
Discourse of Race
.

108
. Rhoads,
Manchus and Han
, p. 204.

109
. Katz,
Out of the Ghetto
, p. 1. A more recent account, focused especially on political emancipation, is Vital,
A People Apart
.

110
. For a general history of the Jewish reform movement, see M. A. Meyer,
Response to Modernity
.

111
. A. Green,
Moses Montefiore
, p. 2.

112
. Katz,
Prejudice
, pp. 245–72.

113
. There is a summary of the extensive literature in Noiriel,
Immigration
, pp. 207–86.

114
. Research on Russian anti-Semitism is summarized in Marks,
How Russia Shaped the Modern World
, pp. 140–75.

115
. Sorin,
A Time for Building
, p. 55; Dinnerstein,
Antisemitism in America
, pp. 35ff.

116
. See also Mosse,
Final Solution
, p. 168.

117
. Shaw,
Jews of the Ottoman Empire
, pp. 187–206.

118
. Fink,
Defending the Rights of Others
, pp. 5–38.

119
. On the geographical distribution of the world's Jewish population, see Karady,
Jews of Europe
, pp. 44f.

120
. Reinhard Rürup, “Jewish Emancipation in Britain and Germany,” in: Brenner et al.,
Two Nations
, pp. 49–61.

121
. Goodman and Miyazawa,
Jews in the Japanese Mind
, p. 81.

122
. Poliakov,
Aryan Myth
, p. 232.

123
. Fredrickson,
Racism
, p. 72.

124
. Geulen,
Wahlverwandte
, p. 197.

125
. A cross-European perspective is offered in Brustein,
Roots of Hate
.

126
. Haumann,
East European Jews
, pp. 78f.

127
. Ibid., pp. 171f.; Weeks,
From Assimilation
, pp. 71ff.

128
. Love,
Race over Empire
, pp. 1–5, 25f.

129
. P. A. Kramer
, Blood of Government
, pp. 356f.

130
. Fredrickson,
Racism
, pp. 75–95.

131
. Ibid., p. 95.

132
. Vital,
A People Apart
, pp. 717f., 725.

133
. This is also the conclusion in Volkov,
Germans, Jews, and Anti-Semites
, pp. 67f.

CHAPTER XVIII: Religion

    1
. This chapter owes some important suggestions to an excellent sociological study: Beyer,
Religions
.

    2
. On “master narratives” in the modern history of religion, see D. Martin,
On Secularization
, pp. 123–40.

    3
. “Analogous transformation”: Beyer,
Religions
, p. 56; as a model of “entangled history” in Britain and India, see Veer,
Imperial Encounters
.

    4
. See the persuasive critique in Graf,
Wiederkehr
, pp. 233–38; and Beyer,
Religions
, pp. 62ff.

    5
. On the various concepts of religion in the “world religions,” see Haußig,
Religionsbegriff
.

    6
. J. R. Bowen,
Religions in Practice
, pp. 26f. (expanded).

    7
. On emerging Japanese notions of “religion,” see the brillant study: Josephson,
Invention of Religion in Japan
.

    8
. Jensen,
Manufacturing Confucianism
, p. 186.

    9
. Hsiao Kung-chuan,
A Modern China
, pp. 41–136.

  10
. Beyer,
Religions
, pp. 83f.

  11
. Masuzawa,
Invention
, pp. 17–20.

  12
. For nineteenth-century Europe and America, see Helmstadter,
Freedom and Religion
; and for a comparison between emancipatory processes, Liedtke and Wendehorst,
Emancipation
.

  13
. Cassirer,
Philosophy of the Enlightenment
, pp. 160ff.

  14
. Zagorin,
Toleration
, p. 306.

  15
. Sanneh,
Crown
, p. 9. Islamic and Christian proselytism is a central theme in Coquery-Vidrovitch,
Africa and the Africans
.

  16
. Lynch,
New Worlds
, p. 228.

  17
. The argument in this section focuses mainly on social history. There is a fine discussion of the history of ideas (taking France as its example) in Lepenies,
Sainte-Beuve
, pp. 317–62.

  18
. McLeod,
Secularisation
, p. 285.

  19
. Ibid., pp. 224, 262.

  20
. Browne,
Darwin
, vol. 2, p. 496.

  21
. Beales and Dawson,
Prosperity and Plunder
, pp. 291f.

  22
. Spiro,
Buddhism
, p. 284.

  23
. Joseph Fletcher, “Ch'ing Inner Asia,” in: Fairbank and Twitchett,
Cambridge History of China
, vol. 10, pp. 35–106, at 99.

BOOK: The Transformation of the World
8.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Harmony by Marjorie B. Kellogg
Don't Let Him Know by Sandip Roy
Claimed by Jaymie Holland
Seeing Stars by Diane Hammond
The Storms of War by Kate Williams
Unfinished Muse by R.L. Naquin
Into the Inferno by Earl Emerson