Imperialism in Asia

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    Industrialization is the blame for the scramble for Africa, because without the technologies produced, and the mass production in which they were produced there would be no way for the europeans to over Africa as easily as they did. The “Scramble for Africa” was a complete invasion by european powers, between 1881 and 1914. Industrialization which is to blame for the scramble for africa is a process in which a society is transformed to using more machinery and producing more good along with…

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    I am writing this letter as the wife of one of your officers whom you sent to Africa for ‘trade’. I want to urge you to stop sending our people to the wretched and distant land. My husband stayed in Africa for ten long months and has returned a changed person. Before his trip, he always had an exuberance for life, and loved spending time together with our children. Now, he barely speaks, and his once kind eyes are cold and distant, as if replaying the horrors he experienced abroad. In order to…

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    Conrad’s The Heart of Darkness functioned as a central influence to anyone that desired to lengthen their familiarity on the vulgar circumstances regarding the Congo. In contrast, rather than projecting historical occurrences, he managed to write in pros to display creativity towards a theoretical situation to force the reader to broaden their perspectives of colonization. Subsequent to evaluating the extract from The Heart of Darkness, it became evident to me that the perceptions this novel…

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    Orwell and Imperialism Abstract: I propose to conduct a research on Imperialism and it’s impact on both the colonized country and the colonizer. In order to a certain the economic, social and historical effects that it has on the nations involved in imperialism. I ultimately hope to find the seeds of imperialism under the mask of anti-imperialism through George Orwell writing “Shooting an elephant”. Imperialism is a policy, which was developed by the superiority and arrogance that could be…

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    Growth In Africa

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    A decade after, colonization in Africa was nearly abolished, and growth was increasing rapidly. African growth and its structure was consistent with the state of South Asia. In the 1970s African economies began to decline, many nations became authoritarian, and while African growth began to shrink, Asia improved. Collier explains slow growth in Africa with the argument of policy vs destiny factors, and domestic vs external factors. Controversy around external factors in Africa was the…

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    In ‘The Rhetoric of Empire’, David Spur explores the discourse that Western journalists, travel writers and imperial administrators have used to depict the non-Western world using tropes, which he identifies through a careful analysis, tracing various sorts of writings from different historical contexts, and studying the way in which these tropes have been deployed. Among these rhetorical modes are surveillance, classification, and affirmation; framing these themes proves very much useful, as it…

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    Sylvia Wynter's Analysis

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    In Sylvia Wynter’s (1990) seminal essay, “Beyond Miranda’s Meanings: Un/Silencing the ‘Demonic Ground’ of Caliban’s Woman,” the scholar argues that Western Europe’s colonization of the Americas and Africa shifted the ways in which Europeans conceived of difference. Rather than the use of sex characteristics, which had previously been the defining marker of distinction, “the cultural-physiognomic variations between the dominant expanding European civilization and the non-Western peoples that,…

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    The Elephant Vanishes can be seen as a manifestation of modernization and homogenization of Japanese culture through the influence of westernization. Murakami is particularly interested in the way that the characters react towards the changing society. Throughout the collection, he writes about the consequence of westernization by exploring the seriousness of Japan as a vanishing culture. This idea is most profound in the beginning and the end story of the collection The Wind-up Bird and…

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    The nineteenth century corresponds to the scramble for Africa and to the birth of colonialism. During that period, a lot of writers, philosophers and explorers emerged. Among them, there were Joseph Conrad and Stanley. In their writings, their main claim is that Africa is a jungle where live “savages” but also an unhistorical part of the world. Indeed, throughout their texts, there are a lot of animalistic, pejorative and inhuman terms used to qualify Africans. For instance, Stanley points out…

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    What if the country you lived in was colonized? What does colonialism even mean? It means that other countries are trying to take over your country. In the film hotel Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina didn’t take that so he tried to stop it and he eventually stopped it. Did you know that Paul Rusesabagina risked his life just to save 1,268 people from dying. And its not cool how nearly a million Tutsi died by their heritage by the rivals Hutus. But that’s not the important stuff, the important stuff…

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