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T H E PA L G R AV E E N C YC L O P E D I A O F I M P E R I A L I S M & A N T I - I M P E R I A L I S M GENERAL EDITORS IMMANUEL NESS & ZAK COPE SENIOR EDITORIAL ADVISOR SAËR MATY BÂ VOLUME I THE PALGRAVE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF IMPERIALISM AND ANTI-IMPERIALISM THE PALGRAVE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF IMPERIALISM AND ANTI-IMPERIALISM Edited by Immanuel Ness Brooklyn College, The City University of New York, USA and Zak Cope Independent author and scholar VOLUME I © Immanuel Ness and Zak Cope 2016 Individual articles © Respective authors 2016 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No portion of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2016 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN Palgrave Macmillan in the UK is an imprint of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. Palgrave Macmillan in the US is a division of St Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN 978-1-349-57691-3 ISBN 978-0-230-39278-6 (eBook) DOI 10.1057/9780230392786 This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Typeset by MPS Limited, Chennai, India. Contents Preface vi Editorial Board ix List of Contributors x Entries A–Z within the following sections: Volume I Biographies 1 Country and regional analysis 249 Culture and the arts 471 History 543 Volume II History (continued) 746 Movements and ideologies 805 Political economy 975 Themes and concepts 1191 Index 1396 Preface to scholars and students of the humanities and the social sciences. Yet whereas impe- rialism is an indispensable element of con- The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Imperialism and temporary political analysis and scholarly Anti-Imperialism presents prominent themes, investigation, a primary academic reference epochal events, theoretical explanations, and work on the subject has up to now been sorely historical accounts of imperialism from the lacking. As well as its academic relevance, beginnings of modernity and the capitalist imperialism is of profound concern to anyone world system in the 16th century to the pre- interested in international history, politics, sent day. Important scientific and scholarly sociology and economics. The Encyclopedia interpretations of imperialism have in the last of Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism was con- twenty years reshaped the way intellectuals ceived and designed to fill this gap for schol- analyse and map human history. The present ars and students across academic disciplines work takes these innovations a step further, and beyond the confines of the university. offering a body of comparative research that In its broadest definition, imperialism is both challenges and enhances our under- the military, political, legal and/or economic standing of the world we live in. control of one people’s territory by another Starting from a shared commitment to so that the subject territory is made to relin- internationalism and social justice, we have quish resources, labour and produce for taken care to include essays that elucidate little or no compensation. Almost all socie- the historical and contemporary centrality of ties have been subject to various forms of imperialism to all aspects of society. In doing imperialism at one time or another, trans- so, we have attempted to present imperial- forming their established political order and ism from a range of perspectives. As such, socioeconomic activities, prohibiting old we do not agree with all of the interpretations customs and imposing new ones, dislocat- or conclusions reached by all of the authors ing inhabitants from their communities and whose work appears herein. Indeed, we differ in some instances settling and occupying profoundly with some of the assertions made, territories afresh. In the process, imperial- the most questionable of which tend to reflect ism has imposed national, racial, ethnic, typical ideological prejudices of imperialist and class domination on disparate popula- society. Nonetheless, we believe that a glar- tions. This work examines how imperialism ing inattention to the transfiguring effects of has impacted societies in the Third World, imperialism on the political structures, eco- (i.e. the former colonies of Asia, Africa, nomic institutions, cultures and psychologies Latin America, and the Caribbean) as well of both imperialist and oppressed nations can as how it has shaped social relations and be found across the political spectrum. We popular perceptions in the First-World coun- consider this oversight a major obstacle to the tries of Europe, North America, and Japan. understanding and progressive transforma- It describes imperialism’s shifting mecha- tion of society and hope that the Encyclopedia nisms of international wealth transfer and contributes to its overcoming. reveals how super-profits derived from super- While post-colonial studies has from the exploitation, accumulation by dispossession, 1970s onward described the perseverance and debt usury (none of which can treated in of forms of cultural domination, clearly an isolation from the others) have come to form important marker of imperialist influence, the very taproot of the global profit system. critical geopolitical and economic analy- ‘Imperialism’ is a term that is politically sis is absent in much of the research. At the charged. For some, it signifies the glory of same time, whereas formal imperialism has Empire, the march of progress, and the tri- largely been abandoned (though not com- umph of civilisation. In recent years there pletely, as the examples of Afghanistan, Iraq, has been a dramatic surge in pro-Imperial and Palestine show), free-market globalisa- discourse, epitomised in Britain by the tion has stimulated a new era of neo-colonial work of scholars and commentators such imperialism, reinforcing divisions in wealth as Niall Ferguson, Robert Kaplan, Andrew within nations and across borders. Given a Roberts, William Dalrymple, Daniel Kruger, renewed popular and academic interest in the Keith Windschuttle, and Dennis Prager. subject, attendant to its increasingly obvious In the 1990s, US political scientist Samuel real-world import, a comprehensive collec- Huntington famously decried the inherent tion on imperialism is an invaluable resource Preface vii barbarism of all non-Western cultures in his agreements, tariff barriers, trade routes, pro- The Clash of Civilizations and found an eager tected markets for investments and manufac- mainstream audience in the context of the tures, and sources of raw materials. Leaving so-called War on Terror and the discourse of aside excess deaths caused by economic ‘humanitarian interventionism’. Meanwhile, dependence on foreign monopolies, we may the state and corporate media monopolies also consider imperialism as responsible for dominating public discourse around the the deaths of tens of millions of people in world present phenomena associated with interventions by the major imperialist powers ongoing imperialist machinations and pro- (the USA, especially) all over the Third World cesses in a consistently and universally since 1945. benign light, except where a rival might be In light of the above, we believe that it is held culpable. impossible to properly understand imperial- This volume does not attempt any exhaus- ism without reference to the struggle against it. tive account of the human toll of imperialism; Anti-imperialism took shape in the West that would require dozens of thick volumes to with mass opposition and national libera- cover the spectrum in any detail. It is impor- tion struggle leading to the dissolution of the tant to state, however, that the development Austro-Hungarian, German, Ottoman, and and maintenance of industrial capitalism Russian Empires following World War I. Its was made possible, inter alia, by the plunder appeal grew considerably with the impact of of Indian gold and silver from the Americas, the Russian and Chinese revolutions and the the wholesale theft of Indian land by force subsequent erosion of the British and French of arms and the resultant 50–100 million empires in the aftermath of World War II. In deaths from war, overwork, overcrowding, the English-speaking metropoles, the strug- economic ruin, starvation, malnourishment gles of Black Americans and Irish, as well as and related diseases; by the slave trade the struggles of the Palestinians in the 1960s (1500–1869) which resulted in the deaths of and 1970s popularised anti-imperialist resist- perhaps 20 million Africans, the loss of up ance still further. With the disintegration of to 100 million Africans from their home- the Soviet Bloc and the imposition of neolib- land and hundreds of years of agonising eral regimes everywhere, the struggle between toil, wanton mistreatment and early death East and West has shifted primarily to that for them; by the Cromwellian conquest of between North and South, exposing the abject Ireland between 1649 and 1650 that resulted divisions of income and opportunity within in approximately 618,000 deaths as well as the world system. We present here a range the colonial exploitation that led to the Great of biographies and movement studies that Famine of 1845–52 resulting in 1 million exemplify the rich and ongoing tradition of deaths and 1 million emigrants; by Britain’s national liberation theories and practices. plunder of India that resulted in about 29 mil- By highlighting the centrality of imperi- lion deaths from famine between 1877 and alism to present and historical social reali- 1902; by Belgium’s colonisation of the Congo ties, the Encyclopedia provides a multifaceted which between 1880 and 1920 resulted in at corrective to the myopic (inter)national- least 10 million deaths through starvation and ism espoused in the global North by both slaughter; by Japan’s colonial wars leading to the political right and its ostensible foes on perhaps 30 million deaths; by the killing of the left. Undoubtedly, the class interests of the half-a-million Iraqi children under five years labour aristocracy have been reflected in the old who died between 1991 and 1998 from analyses and propaganda of the European and sanctions imposed by the US and UK; and by North American left for which imperialism investors’ ongoing dispossession of the land is too often understood either as a historical of the world’s poorest peoples which results or cultural throwback or as benefiting only in needless hunger, preventable disease and (some) capitalists or a narrow upper stratum curable disease leading to the unnecessary of workers in specific sectors of the economy. deaths of 100 million children every decade. Under capitalism, however, the privileges of Added to these figures must be those deaths the metropolitan workforce relative to the occurring during the First World War (37 mil- proletariat proper (exploited, value-creating lion) and Second World War (at least 50 mil- wage-earners) are afforded only by imperial- lion), wars instigated by imperialist rivals as ism and can, therefore, only be maintained or a means of each securing preferential trade extended by the same means. Ultimately, this viii Preface ensures that the pursuit of short-term eco- goals, tactics, influence and outcomes over nomic advancement by what is thus consti- time and space. We have not, unfortunately, tuted as a mass labour aristocracy must entail been able to include all of the biographies open or tacit compromise with capital. Those that we would have liked to (for example, of within the upper echelons of the global work- such anti-imperialists as Jose Maria Sison, ing class who aim to determine their destiny George Padmore, Bhagat Singh, George free of capitalist diktat must advocate the abo- Habash, Hassan Nasrallah, Gerry Adams, lition of global wage scaling, the sine qua non Michael Collins, Sitting Bull, Robert Mugabe, of imperialism, even in the certain knowledge Daniel Ortega, Fidel Castro, Muammar that this will mean a lengthy and considerable Gadaffi, Rajani Palme Dutt, Lin Biao, Enver reduction in their compatriots’ purchasing Hoxha, Abimael Guzmán, Charu Majumdar power. and Subhas Chandra Bose, amongst oth- The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Imperialism and ers), or essays on all subjects relating to Anti-Imperialism is divided into seven sections: imperialism. We encourage readers to use Biographies; Country Analysis; Culture and this resource as a spur for further investiga- the Arts; History; Movements and Ideologies; tion. Nonetheless, we are confident that The Political Economy; and Themes and Concepts. Palgrave Encyclopedia of Imperialism and Anti- It provides a comprehensive examination and Imperialism is the most comprehensive schol- overview of its subject, covering many of the arly examination of the subject to date. most significant social, cultural, political, and We hope you enjoy reading it as much as we economic aspects of the imperialist project. enjoyed editing it. Essays chronicle the ways in which imperial- Immanuel Ness, New York ist domination has unfolded, tracing its roots, Zak Cope, Belfast Editorial Board General Editors Immanuel Ness Brooklyn College, City University of New York, USA Zak Cope Independent author and scholar Editorial Advisory Board Christos Mais Eric Draitser Universiteit Leiden, Political Analyst The Netherlands Godfrey Vincent Amiya Kumar Bagchi Tuskegee University, USA Institute of Development Studies Kolkata, India and Monash Norman Markowitz University, Australia Rutgers University, USA Radhika Desai Gregory Zucker University of Manitoba, Canada Baruch College, USA

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