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  • Hello, my name's Tom, and welcome to

  • another episode of What the Theory?, my

  • somewhat sporadic series in which I aim

  • to provide some sometimes enjoyable but

  • certainly accessible introductions to

  • some key concepts in the humanities. A

  • few people have asked in the comments to

  • some of my other What the Theory? videos

  • for a video about postcolonialism. And

  • that was certainly the video that I set

  • out to write today. However, just as when

  • we were looking at postmodernism it was

  • important for us to first have a decent

  • grasp on modernism to really understand

  • the ramifications for postmodernism,

  • it became increasingly clear that it

  • was key to have a proper understanding

  • of colonialism before even being able to

  • begin to discuss postcolonialism. And,

  • although I did try initially to

  • work them into one video, it looked like

  • it was gonna be absolutely massive.

  • So, what I decided to do instead is to

  • split it up into two videos, this first

  • one on colonialism and a second one on

  • postcolonialism which will come out

  • shortly after. If you would like to see

  • that video when it does come out then

  • please do consider subscribing and,

  • equally, if you have any suggestions or

  • desires for a video you'd like

  • to see then please do comment down below

  • and let me know, that's always really

  • useful. A second precursor to this video

  • is that I'm aware that, as someone from

  • England, my understanding of both

  • colonialism and postcolonialism can

  • only ever really be academic. As such,

  • what I've aimed to do throughout both videos

  • is to draw on a wide range of

  • scholars many of whom have a far more

  • visceral experience of

  • colonialism and the

  • repercussions of that. For now, though,

  • here we go with Colonialism: What the

  • Theory?

  • Colonization has a long history. Archaic

  • Greece (that's the period just before

  • Classical Greece) established colonies

  • both around the Mediterranean Sea but

  • also around the Black Sea. They did so

  • partly in order to gain access to

  • different kinds of raw materials but

  • also to deal with their overpopulation

  • problem. The notion of Empire similarly

  • goes back to Ancient Egypt when the

  • Upper Valley, led by King Narmer, conquered

  • the Lower Valley thus uniting the

  • country. And it's worth saying early on

  • in this video that, within what today

  • we're going to be referring to as

  • colonialism, there is in fact a number of

  • different political systems. So,

  • colonialism and the idea of

  • going to "settle" a foreign land is very

  • different to the idea of Empire and one

  • nation ruling over another territory. For

  • the purposes of today's video, however,

  • we're going to largely conflate both

  • those two (and also the many kind of sub

  • forms of colonialism or Empire) in order

  • to talk more broadly about the notion of

  • one nation ruling over a distant

  • territory, usually overseas. And this is

  • partly simply for the reason that I

  • often cite, in order to keep this video

  • digestible in one sitting, but also

  • because, as always with this series, what

  • I'm interested in today is primarily the

  • cultural both implications and

  • justifications of colonialism rather

  • than the minutiae of each of the

  • particular political systems which

  • enabled it to happen. And, despite those

  • historical antecedents which I've

  • already discussed, we're today

  • exclusively going to be talking about

  • modern colonialism; that is when European

  • nations set out to either send their own

  • citizens to settle in foreign

  • territories or established political

  • control overseas. So, let's begin with a

  • brief (and certainly incomplete) review of

  • how the process of colonisation happened.

  • From the early 16th century,

  • technological advances in both

  • shipbuilding and also navigation allowed

  • a number of European

  • nations to travel overseas much

  • further than they had before. And, with

  • this, they identified possible trade

  • benefits. Though this period often gets

  • termed (extremely problematically) as the

  • "Age of Discovery", it's important to

  • remember that, as Jean Brown Mitchell

  • reminds us in the Encyclopedia

  • Britannica article, that 'it was new roots

  • rather than new lands that filled the

  • minds of kings and commoners, scholars

  • and seamen'.

  • Particularly, many European nations were

  • keen to access more quickly and more

  • directly luxury goods from Asia.

  • Commodities such as pepper and many

  • spices until this point had to be

  • transported over land thus going through

  • many different territories each of which

  • would add their own layer of profit.

  • Their motive, then, was that, by more

  • directly importing some of these goods

  • over the sea rather than over land, they

  • might be able to cut out some middlemen

  • and therefore bring the price down on

  • these items. As nations set off in search

  • of these trade routes, however, time and

  • again they instead found themselves

  • encountering new land masses which they

  • were previously unaware of. (This

  • ignorance to other continents is in spite

  • of the fact that the Vikings had

  • previously visited North America, but

  • that's perhaps a story for another time).

  • A prime example of this is the Spanish

  • explorer Christopher Columbus who was

  • searching for a passage to Asia when he

  • instead came across the island of San

  • Salvador in the Bahamas (known to its

  • then inhabitants as Guanahani). As more

  • lands began to be "discovered", European

  • nations largely decided, rather than just

  • to trade with the indigenous peoples, to

  • instead establish political control over

  • these territories and rule them from

  • afar. And it's worth remembering that, in

  • all cases, the primary motive for doing

  • so was to better exploit these newly

  • found lands for economic advantage. In

  • South America, for example, Spain found a

  • number of veins of silver ore; whereas, in

  • North America, it was largely tobacco

  • that was deemed to have real economic

  • potential back in Europe. Due to similar

  • technological advances in shipbuilding

  • and navigation

  • that had led to the first contact

  • between Europe and the Americas, this

  • period also saw the beginning of the

  • Atlantic slave trade in which

  • expeditions from European nations set

  • out to West Africa to either abduct

  • African people themselves or purchase

  • them from local slave catchers. Enslaved

  • Africans were, for the most part, shipped

  • to the Americas in order to carry out

  • the work that the exploitation of the

  • natural resources of that continent

  • required. Spain's silver mines and the

  • tobacco farms of the British colonies,

  • then, were populated largely by enslaved

  • people from Africa. And it's worth

  • pointing out that, in establishing their

  • political power over the rest of the

  • world, slavery and colonialism very much

  • intersected to make the European nations

  • that were involved in both even more

  • powerful. And it wasn't just about

  • exploiting the natural resources of

  • these newly found territories, it was as

  • much about being able to control trade

  • both going into these places and out of

  • them. The Industrial Revolution in

  • Britain, for example, was largely made

  • possible because of the "new markets" that

  • were opened up through the expansion of

  • the empire. The fact that European

  • colonialism was initially driven by

  • trade rather than by the political motive

  • of wanting to have that kind of

  • political control over the rest of the

  • globe can perhaps be seen most keenly in

  • the example of the various East India

  • Companies. The East India Companies of

  • Britain, the Netherlands, Spain and

  • Portugal were initially private

  • companies. The British East India Company,

  • for example, was a private enterprise

  • which set out for India in order,

  • primarily, to make money off the spice

  • trade. They gradually, however, also became

  • involved in the trading of cotton, opium

  • and slaves. It was this private

  • company which initially took control, by

  • force, of the Indian subcontinent; it was

  • only after the Indian Mutiny of 1857 in

  • which control was passed directly to the

  • UK government. This would be a very long

  • video if I attempted to lay out the

  • exact things which happened in every

  • case whereby a European nation

  • took political and economic control over

  • another. By 1900, however, European nations

  • had control of over 75% of the rest of

  • the world. It's also worth pointing out

  • how recent much of this activity was for

  • while here we've mainly focused on the

  • beginnings of the colonization process,

  • much of this activity continued well

  • into the 20th century. For example, only

  • 10% of the continent of Africa

  • was under European control as recently

  • as 1870 when the so called "Scramble for

  • Africa" saw this grow over a few decades

  • to 90 percent. For the rest of this video,

  • however, I want to focus not on the

  • political system of colonialism but

  • instead on the ideology of colonialism

  • that sat beneath that. And the ideology

  • of colonialism had two main effects in

  • its contemporary period: the first was

  • to legitimise these actions in the minds

  • of those who were undertaking them and

  • the citizens of the countries in whose

  • names they were supposedly acting. But

  • far more important is the impact of

  • colonial ideology on the so-called

  • "subjects" of the countries which were

  • being ruled over. Margaret Cohen and

  • Kavita Reddy document the

  • development of colonialism as an

  • ideology fairly extensively in the

  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

  • entry for the term. Most interesting is

  • their reminder that early colonialism

  • took place within a political and

  • religious context in which notions of

  • Natural Law, a philosophy developed

  • most influentially by Thomas Aquinas

  • which argued that all human beings, as God's

  • creations, had certain inherent rights,

  • was gaining traction. The popularity of

  • this philosophy had even reached the

  • Vatican and, very early on, Pope Innocent IV,

  • in stark contrast to the

  • papal authority given to the

  • Crusades, stated that it was not

  • legitimate for European nations to wage

  • war on indigenous

  • peoples simply for the reason that they

  • were not Christians.

  • Instead, violence against these people

  • could only be just if they were seen to

  • be breaking Natural Law themselves. As

  • Cohen and Reddy write, 'non-believers had

  • legitimate dominion over themselves and

  • their property, but this dominion was

  • abrogated if they proved incapable of

  • governing themselves according to

  • principles that every reasonable person

  • would recognise'. Here, then, we find the

  • genus of an idea which is a mainstay of

  • colonial ideology throughout the ages in

  • which people already living in lands

  • which European nations wished to colonize

  • were presented as being uncivilized and

  • thus having no understanding themselves

  • of any kind of moral code. As early as

  • Columbus's second voyage to South America,

  • the Spanish drew upon very flimsy

  • evidence that the indigenous people were

  • engaging in cannibalism in order to

  • present them as being "uncivilized" and

  • thus in contravention of natural law.

  • Colonialist Nations came to brand their

  • conquering enterprises not as attempts

  • to take control of foreign lands and

  • indenture indigenous people for material

  • gain but, instead, as some kind of mission

  • to "civilize" the "uncivilized" peoples of

  • the world. Such notions of "civilizing the

  • natives" continued long after the

  • Enlightenment where Reason largely

  • replaced God as the moral arbiter. John

  • Stuart Mill, for example, though

  • recognizing the exploitative nature of

  • colonialism, largely came to accept that a

  • period of political control was needed

  • in order to civilize indigenous peoples

  • to a point where they might be capable

  • of self-government. Of Spanish attempts

  • to 'civilize the Indians of Paraguay' he

  • writes that 'the real difficulty was the

  • improvidence of the people; their

  • inability to think for the future; and

  • the necessity accordingly of the most

  • unremitting and minute superintendence on the part of

  • their instructors'. We see here that

  • notion of the Spanish being required to

  • "instruct" Paraguayans in how to live in a society.

  • These justifications for colonialism and

  • imperialism were developed further

  • following the publication of Charles

  • Darwin's On the Origin of Species and

  • The Descent of Man.

  • Philosophers including Herbert Spencer

  • and Karl Pearson attempted to apply

  • Darwin's theories of evolution to human

  • society in a developmental view of

  • history which argued that all human

  • societies were on the same trajectory.

  • Thus, they posited pre-industrial nations,

  • rather than having entirely different

  • contexts to European nations, were just

  • "less developed". This sat alongside a number

  • of pseudo-scientific treatises which

  • attempted to suggest that non-Europeans

  • (or non-white people) were in some way

  • "less evolved" than Europeans. A

  • combination of both of these can be

  • found in Rudyard Kipling's 1899 poem The

  • White Man's Burden in which he depicts

  • "the white man" as been burdened by the

  • responsibility of bringing colonized

  • (non-white) people 'to the light' of

  • civilization. I won't give you an awful

  • poetry recital here but I will leave a

  • link down to the poem below if you want

  • to go and have a read of it along with

  • some other further reading from around

  • this topic. We can get a taste for what

  • this "civilizing mission" looked like by

  • taking a brief look at the education

  • system in India under the British Raj.

  • Prior to the arrival of the British in

  • India, an informal system of education

  • already existed in the continent. It was

  • largely focused on the education of boys

  • over girls and funded by patronage

  • rather than by government, but this was

  • true of education systems all across the

  • world including in most of Europe.

  • Initially, educating the people of India

  • was not even a thought in the mind of

  • colonizing forces, however, eventually,

  • partly due to pressure from Indian

  • officers within the East

  • India Company and party due to the need

  • to recruit administrative workers from

  • the continent itself, the company passed

  • a charter which started the process

  • of beginning an education system in

  • India. Rather than building upon the

  • informal network of schools which

  • already existed, however, the East India

  • Company, and eventually the Raj, instead

  • decided to build their own completely

  • new system. And, as Syama Prasad Mookerjee

  • argues, the system they built 'was largely

  • dissociated from the cultural and

  • educational traditions of the people and

  • made an alien language the vehicle of

  • new ideas that were expected to

  • regenerate the people of India'. Education

  • was to be carried out only in the

  • English language and to focus on a so-

  • called "Western curriculum". It was only

  • accessible by those who were already

  • relatively affluent with the idea that

  • this would cause a filtration of British

  • culture down into lower castes. The

  • motive of this education system was

  • indeed laid out pretty bluntly by the

  • British MP Thomas Macaulay who wrote that

  • 'we must do our best to form a class who

  • may be interpreters between us and the

  • millions whom we govern, a class of

  • persons Indian in blood and colour but

  • English in taste, opinions, words and

  • intellect'. Further, to those opposed to

  • such a process of acculturation, he

  • suggested that 'I've never found one

  • among them who could deny that a single

  • shelf of a good European library was

  • worth the whole native literature of

  • India and Arabia'. This entire education

  • system, then, was predicated on the notion

  • that European (or, mostly, British) culture

  • was vastly superior to that which

  • already existed in India. Across the

  • subcontinent, the likes of Shakespeare

  • and Milton were deployed as examples of

  • how great this culture is and also to

  • build an affinity amongst Indians to the

  • land that was colonising them

  • rather than their own nation. More

  • broadly, the publication of works of literature in

  • Sanskrit and other indigenous languages

  • was suppressed in order to stop great

  • works of Indian culture being spread

  • throughout the continent. And we'll see

  • in the following video about postcolonialism

  • the effect that this has had

  • on a number of different nations: the

  • suppression of indigenous and already-

  • existing culture in those countries at

  • the expense of extending the reach of

  • the "great European Canon". So, to

  • tie this all up a little bit: we have, in

  • this video, taken a very incomplete look

  • at colonialism. It is an absolutely

  • massive subject and one which has had

  • ramifications for the whole world and

  • how we talk about human geography. As

  • we'll see in my next video on post

  • colonialism, previously colonized nations

  • are still dealing with the material and

  • cultural consequences of colonialism and,

  • equally, echoes of colonial rhetoric can

  • be found in the way that contemporary

  • politicians talk about military

  • intervention (primarily from Europe or

  • from America) into the Middle East. But

  • also in that whole notion of how we talk

  • about "the West" or "Western culture". For

  • today, however, that just about wraps it

  • up. This has been a step into a slightly

  • new field for me, something which I've

  • studied a little bit before but not

  • to this depth. So, it's been really

  • really enlightening. If you have any

  • questions, however, please feel free to

  • put those below and I, or perhaps some

  • other visitors to this video, will have

  • an attempt to find you some

  • answers for those. As always, if you think

  • this video might be a vague net positive

  • for the world then please do consider

  • giving it a thumbs up, that's always

  • really helpful. But thank you very much

  • for watching and have a great week!

Hello, my name's Tom, and welcome to

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殖民主義。殖民主義:WTF?殖民主義和帝國主義簡介 (Colonialism: WTF? Introduction to colonialism and imperialism)

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