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‘De duivel hale dat door en door in weelde en luiheid opgegroeide volk’
Author(s) -
C.B. van 't Veer
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
internationale neerlandistiek
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2214-5729
pISSN - 1876-9071
DOI - 10.5117/in2016.1.veer
Subject(s) - colonialism , civilization , hegemony , history , legitimacy , ancient history , ethnology , political science , law , archaeology , politics
‘The devil taketh those people who grew up in wealth and sloth’: Indianised Europeans, a danger to the colonial system\udFrom contemporary fiction on sea voyage appears a striking image. The ships that sailed between The Netherlands and Dutch East Indies, amidst 1850 and 1890, formed a micro colony: a compressed version of a colonial society.\udPractically, all components of a colonial community are represented on board. That includes the so-called backsliders: the Indianised Europeans. Analysis of eight novels on the sea voyages round Cape of Good Hope shows that Europeans that went native were represented in colonial discourse as a\udfundamental threat to colonial society, as they proved that the alleged superior Western civilization could be affected by supposed inferior Eastern cultures. For that encroaches upon the legitimacy of the colonial hegemony

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