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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Racial conceptions pervaded modern colonial regimes of power throughout Southeast
Asia. Scholars working today on colonial histories in this region would hardly contest
this statement. European imperial expansionism and European racial imaginaries are
each part of the same political field; they share a common history and as such they
should be examined together. In this vein, in recent decades there has been increasing
interest in how the production and circulation of race constructs—whether evocative of
purity or mixture, of an elusive whiteness, or of primitive aboriginality/ies, for
example—might frame, even construct, colonial and national regimes of power. In
particular, scholarly interest has been growing in the historical study of the so-called
racial sciences, a plastic designation under which one may encompass a variety of selfproclaimed scientific knowledge practices—from medicine to (physical) anthropology, the nineteenth-century science of race par excellence
Description
Keywords
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Roque, R. (2020). The Racialization of the Indigeneity of Others. East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal, 14, 1-7
Publisher
Duke University Press
