- Page 1 and 2:
A Deterritorialized History: Invest
- Page 3 and 4:
Table of Contents Abstract.........
- Page 5 and 6:
Introduction In the late nineteenth
- Page 7 and 8:
colonialism. Ronald Robinson and Jo
- Page 9 and 10:
A frequent argument in the thesis o
- Page 11 and 12:
carried further by another. Similar
- Page 13 and 14:
etween German and African societies
- Page 15 and 16:
The German Setting The growth of Ge
- Page 17 and 18:
that the colonial expansion was not
- Page 19 and 20:
In 1883 the economic motives for co
- Page 21 and 22:
European competitors’ exclusionar
- Page 23 and 24:
interest in 1888 in acquiring a col
- Page 25 and 26:
1908. There were also plans to conn
- Page 27 and 28:
limited to abstract academic invest
- Page 29 and 30:
where change is performed upon an e
- Page 31 and 32:
implies a deterritorialization of p
- Page 33 and 34:
extension of deterritorialization t
- Page 35 and 36:
eciprocal reterritorialization mean
- Page 37 and 38:
Deterritorialization rejects focus
- Page 39 and 40:
historiography has traditionally re
- Page 41 and 42:
problems of colonial history, but a
- Page 43 and 44:
epresented a vital dynamic within G
- Page 45 and 46:
of economic, social and political i
- Page 47 and 48:
There was great potential for socie
- Page 49 and 50:
Frauenbund were vehemently opposed
- Page 51 and 52:
medicine, social organization and m
- Page 53 and 54:
y the K-A, the Admiralität, and th
- Page 55 and 56:
society actually facilitated treati
- Page 57 and 58:
But the Pan-Germans’ relationship
- Page 59 and 60:
Nonetheless, not all German papers
- Page 61 and 62:
discourses surrounding cultural art
- Page 63 and 64:
the civilization of the Germans wit
- Page 65 and 66:
Through such cultural deterritorial
- Page 67 and 68:
claim to further African territory,
- Page 69 and 70:
Foucauldian collection of knowledge
- Page 71 and 72:
establishment of boundaries and tri
- Page 73 and 74:
Chapter 3 The social and cultural e
- Page 75 and 76:
profits. The expansion of colonial
- Page 77 and 78:
Yet, while there was much associati
- Page 79 and 80:
the colonies in a new manner, since
- Page 81 and 82:
security that in turn motivated som
- Page 83 and 84:
In addition to territorial disenfra
- Page 85 and 86:
capital does not only reterritorial
- Page 87 and 88:
the state’s assumption of soverei
- Page 89 and 90:
the RKA bureaucracy and the local a
- Page 91 and 92:
settlers, administrators and soldie
- Page 93 and 94:
dominated by memories of war and hy
- Page 95 and 96:
German popular desires were intrins
- Page 97 and 98:
colonial policy and declared that t
- Page 99 and 100:
German colonial imposition. But aft
- Page 101 and 102:
policy. 98 However this still does
- Page 103 and 104:
commercial rights for German compan
- Page 105 and 106: 101 Though law played an important
- Page 107 and 108: appeals to the Reichstag usually fo
- Page 109 and 110: Conclusion 105 This study has focus
- Page 111 and 112: Lastly, Deleuze and Guattari’s pa
- Page 113 and 114: colonialism is impossibly simplisti
- Page 115 and 116: Deterritorialization helps the hist
- Page 117 and 118: 113 Much like the new images of col
- Page 119 and 120: 9 D.C.M. Platt, “The Imperialism
- Page 121 and 122: A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and
- Page 123 and 124: 56 H. Pogge von Strandmann and Eric
- Page 125 and 126: 11 The phrase “perpetual displace
- Page 127 and 128: the notions of labour and independe
- Page 129 and 130: 56 Sartre, xiii. 57 Deleuze, Empiri
- Page 131 and 132: Chapter Two 1 Stoecker, 155. Taylor
- Page 133 and 134: Bülow’s Colonial Writings,” in
- Page 135 and 136: 46 This is poignantly evidenced in
- Page 137 and 138: 70 Ulrich van der Heyden, “Afrika
- Page 139 and 140: 94 R1001 8 Deutsch-Ostafrika. 8.9 E
- Page 141 and 142: 6 In fact, the Southwest African co
- Page 143 and 144: 23 R1001 8 Deutsch-Ostafrika. 8.12
- Page 145 and 146: 49 R1001 1 Allgemeine Angelegenheit
- Page 147 and 148: 68 Heyden and Zeller, 74. 69 Grosse
- Page 149 and 150: promised death for all Herero found
- Page 151 and 152: 111 R1001 1 Allgemeine Angelegenhei
- Page 153 and 154: Herero and Nama wars were similarly
- Page 155: AA Auswärtiges Amt Appendix Guide
- Page 159 and 160: Behnen, Michael. ed. Quellen zur De
- Page 161 and 162: Epstein, Klaus. “Erzberger and th
- Page 163 and 164: Holland, Eugene W. “’Deterritor
- Page 165 and 166: Mongia, Padmini. ed. Contemporary P
- Page 167 and 168: 1907-1915.” The International Jou
- Page 169 and 170: Thomas, Nicholas. Colonialism’s C