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31 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
types of colonies
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1. settler 2. exploitation 3. plantation 4. surrogate 5. internal |
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colonialism
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settler colonies
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exploitation colonies
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focuses on access to resources for export, typically to the metropole |
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plantation colonies
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considered exploitation colonialism; but colonizing powers would utilize either type for different territories depending on various social and economic factors as well as climate and geograpjhy
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surrogate
colonialism |
settlement project supported by colonial power |
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internal colonialism |
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colonialism -Jurgen Osterhammel
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colonialism is a relationship b/w an indigenous (or forcibly imported) majority and a minority of foreign invaders |
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Postcolonialism
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-a socio-political circumstance (period after colonial rule) -an EPISTEMOLOGICAL persepective which challenges and examines the generation of knowledge from and within colonial circumstances |
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relational theory
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a perspective to understand reality or a social system in such a way that the positions and other properties of social actorsa or objects are only meaningful relative to other objects |
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triumphalism
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the assumption that the history of science consists of a narrative of achievements |
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science and colonialism
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western scientific knowledge has been co-constituted with colonialism |
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relational thinking
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thigns and practice do not exist in themselves, they exist in relation |
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essentialism and substantialism
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to treat activities and preferences specific to certain individuals or groups at a certain moment as if they are substantial properties |
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social space
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one has to avoid turning into necessary and intrinsic properties of some group the properties which rest with this group at a given moment b/c of its posuittion in social space |
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social and physical space
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-structure of social space thus manifests itself in the form of spatial opppostions inhabited space functioning as a sort of spontaneous metaphor of soci8al space |
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position tqaking
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individual |
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habitus
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high school |
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early modern times
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lit, distrust of tradish |
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Immanuel KABT
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ENLIGHTENMENT - minority is the inability to make use of ones one understanding without direction from another -self incurred whn one understands |
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who lacks courage
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who can pay others to direct them, women, great mass of humanity |
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SAPERE AUDE
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the age of enlightenment is the age of taking responsibility for one's own knowledge using one's own reason rather than depending on the direction of others |
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freedome to make public use of ones reason in all matters
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by scholars writing for a reading public privately must obey even if engaged in public critism |
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public v private
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officer in the armt, step outside and critize |
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public fre4edom
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once everyone has public freedom and therefore gvt will also |
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FOUCAULT
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CRITIQUE |
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high Kantian enterprise
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little polemical ativitivs
called critique |
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critique
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-a means for a future or a truth that it will not know nor happen to be it oversees a domain it would not want to police and is unable to regulate |
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Strong Programme
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1. casual, that is concerned with the conditions that bring about the state sof knowledge and beleifes 2. impartial 3. symmet5rical 4. reflexice |
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Thomas kuhn
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PARADIGM SHIFT |
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