Waubonsee Community College

Genocide on settler frontiers, when hunter-gatherers and commercial stock farmers clash, edited by Mohamed Adhikari

Label
Genocide on settler frontiers, when hunter-gatherers and commercial stock farmers clash, edited by Mohamed Adhikari
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 305-338) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
essays
Main title
Genocide on settler frontiers
Nature of contents
bibliographydictionaries
Oclc number
910935689
Responsibility statement
edited by Mohamed Adhikari
Series statement
War and Genocide, Volume 22
Sub title
when hunter-gatherers and commercial stock farmers clash
Summary
European colonial conquest included many instances of indigenous peoples being exterminated. Cases where invading commercial stock farmers clashed with hunter-gatherers were particularly destructive, often resulting in a degree of dispossession and slaughter that destroyed the ability of these societies to reproduce themselves. The experience of aboriginal peoples in the settler colonies of southern Africa, Australia, North America, and Latin America bears this out. The frequency with which encounters of this kind resulted in the annihilation of forager societies raises the question of whether these conflicts were inherently genocidal, an issue not yet addressed by scholars in a systematic way
Table Of Contents
'We are Determined to Exterminate Them': The Genocidal Impetus Behind Commercial Stock Farmer Invasions of Hunter-Gatherer Territories -- 'The Bushman is a Wild Animal to be Shot at Sight': Annihilation of the Cape Colony's Foraging Societies by Stock-Farming Settlers in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries -- 'Like a Wild Beast, He Can be Got for the Catching': Child Forced Labour and the 'Taming' of the San along the Cape's North-Eastern Frontier, c. 1806-1830 -- 'We Exterminated Them, and Dr. Philip Gave the Country': The Griqua People and the Elimination of San from South Africa's Transorangia Region -- Vogelfrei and Besitzlos, with no Concept of Property: Divergent Settler Responses to Bushmen and Damara in German South West Africa -- Why Racial Paternalism and not Genocide? The Case of the Ghanzi Bushmen of Bechuanaland -- The Destruction of Hunter-Gatherer Societies on the Pastoralist Frontier: The Cape and Australia Compared -- 'No Right to the Land': The Role of the Wool Industry in the Destruction of Aboriginal Societies in Tasmania (1817-1832) and Victoria (1835-1851) Compared -- Indigenous Dispossession and Pastoral Employment in Western Australia during the Nineteenth Century: Implications for Understanding Colonial Forms of Genocide -- 'A Fierce and Irresistible Cavalry': Pastoralists, Homesteaders and Hunters on the American Plains Frontier -- Dispossession, Ecocide, Genocide: Cattle Ranching and Agriculture in the Destruction of Hunting Cultures on the Canadian Prairies -- Seeing Receding Hunter-Gatherers and Advancing Commercial Pastoralists: 'Nomadistation', Transfer, Genocide
resource.variantTitle
Invariably genocide, when hunter-gatherers and commercial stock farmers clash
Genre
Content
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