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Colonial Subjects: Race, Law and Citizenship in the German Empire, 1884-1914: Empires in Perspective

Autor Dominik Nagl
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 dec 2026
The hastily improvised establishment of a colonial empire in 1884 generated a variety of political and legal problems for Germany. To what extent the colonies and their inhabitants would be integrated into the existing constitutional and legal framework of the Fatherland became an increasingly vexed question and one that the German authorities were ill prepared to deal with.
Drawing on contemporary discourses of law, national identity, and race, this study explores the impact of Germany's colonial expansion on the theory and practice of citizenship, written from a postcolonial studies perspective and providing new insights into the history of transnational migration, racism, subaltern agency and national identity in the age of imperialism.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138731707
ISBN-10: 1138731706
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Empires in Perspective

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate

Cuprins

1. Defining the Colonial Space: German Lawmakers and the Problem of Hybridity 2. Separate and Unequal: Consular Jurisdiction and the Making of Colonial Apartheid 3. ‘Native’: An Impossible Concept 4. ‘Germans but no Germans’: Subjects without Rights 5. Becoming German: Naturalisation and Exclusion in the German Colonies 6. Strangers in the Fatherland: Colonial Migrants in Imperial Germany 7. Forbidden Love: Sexuality, Race and Marriage Law in the Colonial Situation

Descriere

Drawing on contemporary discourses of law, national identity, and race, this study explores the impact of Germany's late nineteenth and early twentieth century colonial expansion on the theory and practice of citizenship, written from a postcolonial studies perspective and providing new insights into the history of transnational migration, racism, subaltern agency and national identity in the age of imperialism.