Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/73477
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Type: Journal article
Title: East of the Cape in 1832: the old Indies world, empire families and "colonial women" in Nineteenth-century Java
Author: Knight, G.
Citation: Itinerario: journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, 2012; 36(1):22-48
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Issue Date: 2012
ISSN: 0165-1153
2041-2827
Statement of
Responsibility: 
G. Roger Knight
Abstract: This paper deals with several themes central to recent debate about Dutch colonial society in Java, the key island of the erstwhile Netherlands Indies. Primarily, these themes relate to the colonial-metropolitan nexus, and my discussion seeks to illuminate these themes with particular reference to the documented experiences of three women who were either on their way to the Indies—or making their way back from there—early in the 1830s. The paper's fundamental argument concerns the importance of the concept of “Empire Families” to an understanding of Dutch colonial communities in the Indies. It is an understanding that serves to correct some misconceptions about the dynamics of those societies in the early to mid-nineteenth-century period. Among other things, building on the work of others and drawing on unpublished documentation, it seeks to locate some aspects of colonial “discourse,” particularly those relating to “colonial women,” in the broader framework of social history.
Rights: © Cambridge University Press 2012
DOI: 10.1017/S0165115312000356
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115312000356
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
History publications

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