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31 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
types of colonies

1. settler


2. exploitation


3. plantation


4. surrogate


5. internal



colonialism


the establishment, exploitation, maintenance, acquisition, and expansion of a colony in one territory by political power



settler colonies


large scale immigration often motivated by religion political or economic reason

exploitation colonies

focuses on access to resources for export, typically to the metropole
plantation colonies
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
surrogate
colonialism

settlement project supported by colonial power

internal colonialism


a notion of uneven structure power between areas of a nation state. the source of exploitation comes from within the state



colonialism -Jurgen Osterhammel

colonialism is a relationship b/w an indigenous (or forcibly imported) majority and a minority of foreign invaders
Postcolonialism


either:


-a socio-political circumstance (period after colonial rule)


-an EPISTEMOLOGICAL persepective which challenges and examines the generation of knowledge from and within colonial circumstances

relational theory

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
triumphalism

the assumption that the history of science consists of a narrative of achievements
science and colonialism

western scientific knowledge has been co-constituted with colonialism
relational thinking

thigns and practice do not exist in themselves, they exist in relation
essentialism and substantialism

to treat activities and preferences specific to certain individuals or groups at a certain moment as if they are substantial properties
social space

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
social and physical space


social space is an invisible set of relationships which tends to retranslate itself in a more or less direct manner into physical space in the form of definite distributional arrangement of agents and properties


-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

position tqaking

individual

habitus

high school
early modern times


rise of nation state, industrialization, discorver,democ, scien and tech


lit, distrust of tradish

Immanuel KABT

ENLIGHTENMENT - minority is the inability to make use of ones one understanding without direction from another


-self incurred whn one understands





who lacks courage

who can pay others to direct them, women, great mass of humanity
SAPERE AUDE

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
freedome to make public use of ones reason in all matters



by scholars writing for a reading public


privately must obey even if engaged in public critism
public argument and critisim

public v private

officer in the armt, step outside and critize
public fre4edom

once everyone has public freedom and therefore gvt will also
FOUCAULT

CRITIQUE
high Kantian enterprise
little polemical ativitivs
called critique
critique


only exists in relation to something other than itself, dependent on its objects


-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

Strong Programme

1. casual, that is concerned with the conditions that bring about the state sof knowledge and beleifes


2. impartial


3. symmet5rical


4. reflexice

Thomas kuhn

PARADIGM SHIFT