Biocultural Empire

Biocultural Empire
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New Histories of Imperial Lifeworlds
Vorbestellbar | Lieferzeit: Vorbestellbar - Erscheint laut Verlag im/am 12.12.2024. I

Erstverkaufstag: 12.12.2024

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Artikel-Nr:
9781350451056
Veröffentl:
2024
Erscheinungsdatum:
12.12.2024
Seiten:
224
Autor:
Antoinette Burton
Gewicht:
454 g
Format:
234x156x25 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Antoinette Burton is Professor of History and Maybelle Leland Swanlund chair at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA. A feminist historian of the British Empire whose work has focused on women, gender, race and intersectional approaches, she is the author of six monographs and many edited collections including (with Renisa Mawani) Animalia: An Anti-Imperial Bestiary for Our Times (2020).Samantha Frost is Professor of political theory in the Department of Political Science, the Department of Gender and Women's Studies, and the Unit for Criticism and Contemporary Theory at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA. She is the author of Biocultural Creatures: Toward A New Theory of the Human (2016), which elucidates the conceptual significance of the plasticity of the biological body.Renisa Mawani is Canada Research Chair in Colonial Legal Histories and Professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia, Canada, located on the unceded territories of the Musqueam peoples. She is the author of Colonial Proximities (2009) and Across Oceans of Law (2018), which was a finalist for the U.K. Socio-Legal Studies Association Theory and History Book Prize (2020) and winner of the Association of Asian American Studies Book Prize for Outstanding Contribution to History (2020). With Antoinette Burton, she is co-editor of Animalia: An Anti-Imperial Bestiary for Our Times (2020).
Human species supremacy is one of the most persistent fictions at work in the field of modern British imperial history today. This open access collection challenges that assumption, and investigates what histories of empire look like if reimagined as the effect of biocultural, chemical and cultural processes, rather than the result of effects by humans that have been visited upon cultural landscapes, fauna and biomes.In understanding the boundaries between human and nonhuman worlds as porous and open to mutual transformation, and foregrounding interspecies interactions, Biocultural Empire seeks to understand the conditions of imperial power, experience and knowledge as a remix of 'nature' and 'culture'. Bringing empire's 'biocultural histories' to the fore, it asks imperial historians to reckon with an interpretative framework which refuses the sovereignty and boundedness of the imperial subject by seeing it as inseparable from its social and ecological formations. Through this biocultural framework this collection highlights how relentlessly the human species bias of western liberal thought persists at the heart of imperial projects and their histories, and offers a new anti-colonial method that represents a significant intervention in the field of British imperial history.The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by University of Illinois, USA and University of British Columbia, Canada.
AcknowledgementsList of Maps, Illustrations and TablesNotes on ContributorsIntroduction: "Biocultural Empires as an Anti-colonial Method" Antoinette Burton (U of Illinois, RenisaMawani (University of British Columbia), Samantha Frost (U of Illinois)1. "A Victorian Parliament of Animals; or, the Biocultural as Imperial Political Form", Antoinette Burton (University of Illinois, USA)2. "Strangers, Difference and the Darkness of Empire: The HMB Endeavour in New Zealand", Tony Ballantyne (University of Otago, New Zealand)3. "History in the Water(s): Water and Empire in North America's Wet Centre", Adele Perry, (University of Manitoba, Canada)4. "Ganja and the Godhead: Intoxication, The Excise Principle, and Sacred Binds in British India" Utathya Chattopadhyaya (UC-Santa Barbara, USA)5. "Biocultural Histories of the Black Anthropocene: Energy, Consumption, and Non-Human Worlds in The History of Barbados and The History of Mary Prince", Anna Feuerstein, (University of Hawaii, USA)6. "'The Royal Sacred Hairy Family of Burmah': Human Difference and Biocultural Empire in the Nineteenth Century", Jonathan Saha, (Durham University, UK)7. "Papering over Muddy Histories: Imperial Logics of Space in the Anthropocene", Debjani Bhattacharya (University of Zurich, Switzerland)8. "Very Like a Whale: Animal Metaphors and the Biocultural Imagination", Jamie Jones (University of Illinois, USA)Epilogue (tbd)BibliographyNotes

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