Youth and Empire: Trans-Colonial Childhoods in British and French AsiaPosted in Asian Diaspora, Books, History, Media Archive, Monographs on 2017-05-14 19:04Z by Steven |
Youth and Empire: Trans-Colonial Childhoods in British and French Asia
Stanford University Press
December 2015
416 pages
Cloth ISBN: 9780804795173
David M. Pomfret, Professor of History
University of Hong Kong
This is the first study of its kind to provide such a broadly comparative and in-depth analysis of children and empire. Youth and Empire brings to light new research and new interpretations on two relatively neglected fields of study: the history of imperialism in East and South East Asia and, more pointedly, the influence of childhood—and children’s voices—on modern empires.
By utilizing a diverse range of unpublished source materials drawn from three different continents, David M. Pomfret examines the emergence of children and childhood as a central historical force in the global history of empire in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This book is unusual in its scope, extending across the two empires of Britain and France and to points of intense impact in “tropical” places where indigenous, immigrant, and foreign cultures mixed: Hong Kong, Singapore, Saigon, and Hanoi. It thereby shows how childhood was crucial to definitions of race, and thus European authority, in these parts of the world. By examining the various contradictory and overlapping meanings of childhood in colonial Asia, Pomfret is able to provide new and often surprising readings of a set of problems that continue to trouble our contemporary world.
Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction
- 1. Childhood and the Reordering of Empire
- 2. Tropical Childhoods: Health, Hygiene and Nature
- 3. Cultural Contagions: Children in the Colonial Home
- 4. Magic Islands: Children on Display in Colonialisms’ Cultures
- 5. Trouble in Fairyland: Cultures of Childhood in Interwar Asia
- 6. Intimate Heights: Children, Nature and Colonial Urban Planning
- 7. Sick Traffic: ‘Child Slavery’ and Imperial Networks
- 8. Class Reactions: Education and Colonial ‘Comings of Age’
- 9. Raising Eurasia: Childhood, Youth and the Mixed Race Question
- 10. Conclusion