Entanglements of Empire: Missionaries, Maori, and the Question of the Body
Conflicts over time management and work discipline showed that Maori had a "task-specific" sense of time, one that corresponded to agricultural cycles of intense labor followed by a period of rest and feasting; these ideas conflicted with the industrious subject central to notions of evang...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Victorian studies 2016-09, Vol.59 (1), p.175-177 |
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description | Conflicts over time management and work discipline showed that Maori had a "task-specific" sense of time, one that corresponded to agricultural cycles of intense labor followed by a period of rest and feasting; these ideas conflicted with the industrious subject central to notions of evangelical improvement (124). In spite of his desire to avoid a teleology of colonization, the book ends with the arguments for a treaty between the Maori and the British government, one that cast the Maori as enfeebled, and needing British protection; it was a debate that recognized the unequal status of a people faced with a growing empire (and a strong navy), a status that many indigenous populations faced as they were confronted by a quickly moving imperial frontier across Asia and Africa in the nineteenth century. |
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language | eng |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy |
subjects | 19th century British Empire Indigenous peoples Missionaries Polynesian languages Teleology Transnationalism |
title | Entanglements of Empire: Missionaries, Maori, and the Question of the Body |
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