Colonialism : Encyclopedia of Global Studies
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Colonialism
Colonialism is both a practice and a worldview. As a practice, it involves the domination of a society by settlers
from a different society. As a worldview, colonialism is a truly global geopolitical, economic, and cultural
doctrine that is rooted in the worldwide expansion of West European capitalism that survived until well after the
collapse of most colonial empires.
Historically, colonies in the strict sense of “settlements” had existed long before the advent of global capitalism;
the English word colony is derived from the ancient Latin term colonia, denoting an outpost or settlement.
However, colonialism as a principle of imperial statecraft and an effective strategy of capitalist expansion that
involved sustained appropriation of the resources of other societies, indeed regions, of the world for the benefit
of the colonizing society, backed by an elaborate ideological justificatory apparatus, is a modern, West European
invention par excellence, emerging from the 15th century onward.
Colonialism involved a combination of several processes, recurring with remarkable consistency across various
instances. Some of these were as follows:
Encounter and repeated/sustained contact between the Western “discoverers” and the rest of the world,
typically involving invasion, conquest, strategic genocide, the relegation of local rulers to subservient roles,
and, eventually, some form of settlement by West Europeans.
The surveying and scientific analysis of the geography, resources, peoples, and customs of the colonies,
with the explicit intent of facilitating resource extraction and/or unequal exchange through forced trading.
The imposition of extractive enterprises, such as plantations, mining, and other forms of raw-materialyielding activities, and the deployment of nonfree “native” labor in such enterprises.
The systematic destruction of indigenous industries to transform the colonies into captive markets for
European goods.
Triangular trade (the hawking of European commodities to Africa, enslaved people to the Americas/the
Caribbean, and plantation products to Europe).
The establishment of modernizationist projects, such as the construction of elaborate transportation and
information infrastructures, the introduction of private property in land, specific forms of taxation, and
colonial law with the purpose of enabling the extractive and disciplinary apparatus of the colonial
administration.
The forced transfer and circulation of enslaved or indentured labor between colonies, or between regions
within the same colony, disrupting culturally articulated modes of interaction between nature and people,
and creating buffer populations between the colonizers and the locals.
Creation of collaborationist/comprador colonial elites, mass educational systems, and public cultures that
systematically facilitated the explicit alignment of ideas such as knowledge and progress with Western
civilization, thereby producing the illusion of European superiority and the normalization of colonial
relations.
Continuous and systematic framing of colonized populations as the backward, inferior, dehumanized “other”
of the enlightened European/White “self,” and the use of the discourse of scientific racism to this end.
In later phases of colonialism, warfare using colonial populations from one colony in armed incursions
against other (potential) colonies.
Prevention of the access of colonial subject populations to Europe.
Because it involved the superimposition of the rule of an alien social order on another, violence inhered in all
aspects of colonialism. As Aimé Césaire has pointed out, colonialism allowed the routine practice of all
elements of what later came to be decried as Nazi violence within Europe, on non-European populations
overseas.
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Although colonialism was certainly a total system, for analytical purposes, it may be useful to approach it as a
compound effect of three interconnected fields of domination: political-economic, social-institutional, and
representational-symbolic. Each of these three fields is considered briefly in the following sections.
Political Economy
Given the tendency within much Western scholarship to view the rise of capitalism as a phenomenon largely
rooted in the dynamics of feudalism in Europe, it is difficult to grasp the significance of colonialism in both the
emergence of global capitalism and the making of what western Europe is today. Immediately before the
colonial period, western Europe was a relatively small, spatially marginal, and economically, not particularly
noteworthy appendage on the vast interlocking Afro-Eurasian system of trade. According to the estimates made
by economic historian Angus Maddison, between the years 1000 and 1500 (i.e., before the full onset of
colonialism), Africa and Asia jointly accounted for 75% to 80% of the total economic output of humankind; by
contrast, western Europe's share hovered between 9% and 18%. With the construction of overseas colonial
empires centered in western Europe, by 1820, Africa's and Asia's joint economic weight in the world decreased
to 64%, while western Europe's grew to approximately 23%.
The 19th century saw two major transformations in the structure of colonial domination of the rest of the world
by western Europe that brought further changes in the relative fortunes of these areas. On the one hand, a
groundswell of successful independence movements in the first half of the century led, in most cases, by creole
elites, in Latin America drastically diminished the colonial holdings of Spain and Portugal. On the other hand, the
colonial penetration of South and Southeast Asia mainly under the British, the French, and the Dutch, and Africa
by several West European colonizing powers intensified considerably, bringing new areas under direct colonial
rule and leading to a scramble among the imperialists to carve out vast areas of these two resource-rich
continents. As a result, by 1913, Africa's and Asia's joint share of the world's income diminished to a nearcatastrophic level (less than 28%), while western Europe, reaching the zenith of its colonial rule, commanded
an unprecedented one third of the total value produced in the world.
How did this happen? Plainly put, colonialism launched two relatively separate processes of global structural
transformation. One could be called colonial value transfer, and the other could be called the devastation effect.
The first involved the unleashing of economic, legal, and logistical mechanisms that would ensure transfer of
natural resources from the colony to the metropole (e.g., deposits of minerals, most prominently silver and
gold, plus, along with industrialization in western Europe and North America, other metals such as iron ore).
West Europeans also initiated the production of crucial commodities such as cotton, spices, tea, and coffee and
exploited slave, hence, by comparison with Europe, strikingly low-cost labor in the colonies. Extremely tilted
systems of taxation and manipulation of currency rates further devalued colonial labor vis-à-vis West European
capital, and they ensured the uninterrupted flow of value from the colonies to the metropole. The significance of
such colonial activities cannot be overstated: For instance, it is estimated that the slave-labor-based plantation
product output of the relatively small island of Saint-Domingue (later known as Haiti) alone accounted for two
fifths of the entire foreign “trade” revenue of France before the Haitian revolution of 1791.
The second process instituted by colonialism resulting in the relative improvement of the global economic
position of western Europe involved the destruction of the social, legal, political, protoindustrial, agrarian, and
other technological structures of the colonized society. Imperial warfare; the displacement or murder of
significant portions of populations; the destruction of the technologies, circuits of trade, and economic
institutions of the indigenous societies; the forced importation of West European products; and the imposition of
legal schemes alien to the existing legal practices of the colonized society, such as the enforcement of private
property in land where communal access to land was the norm (introduced, to a large measure, in order to be
able to impose colonial taxation on rural agricultural production) were disparate elements of colonial policy that
worked together to weaken the economic, political, and social capacities of the colony. In a particularly heinous
example of intentional destruction, the British East India Company, possessing a monopoly on trading opium
grown in India, systematically saturated China—a powerful non-European empire that had successfully resisted
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colonization—with the highly addictive substance in defiance of the repeated, explicit bans on the importation
and sale of opium. The amount of opium smuggled into China by the British increased almost 100 times
between the 1730s and the 1830s, resulting in an addiction epidemic of colossal magnitude, effectively
undermining the Chinese state's capacity to act. The Chinese reaction was used as an excuse to wage two wars
on China by the British Empire in the 19th century, contributing to the effective destruction of the Chinese
Empire despite the inability of the Western powers to gain territorial control beyond a few islands and port
cities.
In sum, the colonial value transfer and the incapacitation effects jointly enabled western Europe to expand its
geopolitical and economic sway during the colonial period and to reap the benefits of dependencies produced
during that period well after the end of formal colonial dominance. This process has been widely documented in
the scholarly literature on economic, political, technological, financial, and aid dependency. The striking
contemporary poverty of some of the erstwhile colonial societies is deeply rooted in these twin political
economic processes of colonial value transfer and devastation as practiced throughout the centuries of colonial
rule.
Social Institutions
Colonialism also produced social forms in the colonies that were distinct from those in place in Europe, even
though in both contexts the driving force was the rise and expansion of capitalism. Within western Europe, the
establishment of the rule of private property and the commodification of all social realms involved the
production of what Antonio Gramsci called hegemony—a combination of compromise, persuasion, and the
judicious use of strategic violence—through the gradual transformations of the educational, legal, religious,
political, and cultural institutions as well as the structures of the public and private spheres. Colonial
administrations, by contrast, bypassed most of these intervening mechanisms, routinely resorting instead to the
use of force and imposing what Ranajit Guha has aptly called dominance without hegemony.
One aspect of colonial dominance without hegemony can be observed in the massive dislocation of human
beings—achieved through physical, juridical, legal, or economic force—in the service of the capitalist production
process. Colonialism generated three main institutionalized forms of human displacements: first, a large
outward movement of soldiers, merchants, requisitioning agents, convicts, prospectors, administrators, farmers,
missionaries, teachers, and increasingly from the early 19th century, social scientists from Europe. A second
displacement involved the capture and sale of human beings as chattel slaves mainly from Africa to the
Americas, the Caribbean, and to a lesser extent from South Asia to colonies in Southeast Asia, until the abolition
of slavery in the mid-19th century. Third, colonial empires practiced the forced displacement of bonded and
convict labor among various, often geographically distant, regions. Bonded labor was destined to work in
plantations, in mines, in the building of infrastructure (such as the use of Chinese coolie labor to build the
railways in North America), and in other forms of construction (such as the use of convict labor from South Asia
in the early construction of the city of Singapore) throughout the 19th century.
Colonies were also treated by the colonizers as experimental spaces. Many West European ideas regarding
policing (including such innovations as fingerprinting and the passport), the law, education, medical science,
and technology (including psychiatric experiments) were first carried out on the “disposable” populations of the
colonies. Such experimentation was made possible by the introduction of sharp, putatively ontological contrasts
between metropole and the colony, the colonizer and the colonized—a worldview that turned on a very specific,
hierarchical understanding of the comparative worth of populations, with European White groups at the top and
all others below.
“Race” thus takes colonial difference to the level of biopolitics. It grafts moral qualities onto observed
phenotypic variation and posits difference as natural and, hence, immutable. Although the 19th-century
understanding of the innate, biological nature of racial difference has been proved to be baseless, these ideas
have acquired a dynamic of their own and continue to shape social relations in the postcolonial world.
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Social relations under colonialism were also deeply gendered and involved explicit sexual exploitation. Most
early Europeans arriving in the colonies were men, with specific fantasies about “native” women. Although the
sexual and caretaking labor of women of colonized populations—who shared a variety of relationships with
European men ranging from slavery to common law marriages—was central to the very reproduction of colonial
workforces in an alien world, discussions about native women as represented in colonial records, memoirs, and
travelogues are typically trivialized by placing them within a larger discourse of the eroticism, sexual abandon,
and general lack of morals in the colonies. Similarly, the construction of native men as effeminate or lesser men
sanctioned multiple forms of subjugation—including sexual exploitation—to be imposed on them. Perhaps the
most egregious examples of such exploitation involved the forced mating of enslaved men and women with the
sole purpose of reproducing the labor force in a context in which marriage and family formation among the
enslaved was forbidden. Sexual exploitation of the enslaved by owners was also a widespread practice.
These kinds of dehumanizing diminution of the non-European other eventually produced a range of reactions in
colonized societies and a variety of strategies and experiences of anticolonialist struggles. Some, such as the
Algerian resistance against the French, have embraced violent insurgency as a necessary and even salutary
element of anticolonial liberation. As Frantz Fanon argued, anticolonial violence can provide a catharsis for the
colonized in contexts where respect, dignity, and even humanity have been systematically denied to them.
Others, such as Mohandas K. Gandhi in his struggle against British rule in India, insisted on the importance of
nonviolence as a symbol of the moral superiority of the non-West over the violence of the West. Although these
two movements reflect different moments in the history of anticolonial struggles, it is worth noting that both of
these instances involved a process of first imagining an “inside,” the idea of a nation beyond the reach of the
colonizers, and a sense of “we-ness,” based on which the political struggle against colonial rule—no matter what
form it took—could be launched.
Representations
As Gayatri Spivak argues, representation has two interlocking aspects: vertreten (approximately meaning “step
in someone's place, represent politically in the formal sense”) and darstellen (roughly “re-present, place there,
portray”). The tortuous history of colonial representations unfolded in a field of power marked by these two
dimensions: The former severely limited the contexts in which the colonized subject could represent herself, and
the latter ensured that representations were neither natural nor innocent, as they were always implicated by
colonial social relations.
As the first voyages of discovery, ostensibly for God, gold, glory, and spices, were being imagined, the question
of the potential conversion of natives was very much among the key preoccupations of the early colonizers.
However, the practice of colonial expansion, involving such immoral acts as the robbing, slaying, and
enslavement of native populations, were clearly at odds with a view of the colonial other as not only human but
potentially Christian. As a result, European representations of the colonized soon acquired new configurations
that locked the other increasingly into eternal savagery. By the 19th century, it was but a small step to move
from this image of the irredeemably savage/heathen to a portrayal of the colonized other as naturally and
immutably inadequate—a racially inferior human being.
Over time, as West European colonial rule both deepened and stabilized in various parts of the world, explicit
discourses about native customs, drawing on observations and interpretations made by colonial administrators,
medical doctors, educators, missionaries, and anthropologists, emerged to form veritable systems of knowledge
about other societies. Indeed, European social sciences developed separate branches for studying specific
colonized societies within a larger discursive framework—Orientalism, in Edward Said's formulation, portrayed
colonized cultures as eternal (hence, fixed in time and unfit for change), feminine, sensual-erotic, weak,
inefficient, and essentially inferior. Colonial exhibitions, newspaper accounts, travel narratives, popular novels,
guidebooks and vade mecums, operettas, popular songs, photographs, postcards, and personal accounts by
former colonial personnel returning from the colonies worked together to stabilize such images of the colonies,
justifying their continued subjection for the metropolitan publics.
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Since the contemporary world is a direct heir to the colonial-imperial order, especially to the logic of the
overseas empires centered in western Europe, the legacy of colonialism in all its dimensions—politicaleconomic, social, and symbolic—has become a integral part of the common history of humankind, explained
partly by the powerful presence of colonial patterns of representation in modern West European public cultures.
These factors gave colonial ideas a life of their own so that even those areas of the world that had no direct
experience of being either the colonized or the colonizer have not escaped the moral, intellectual, and aesthetic
impact of colonialism.
—József Böröcz
—Mahua Sarkar
Further Readings
Césaire, A. (1972). Discourse on colonialism. New York: Monthly Review Press. (Original work published 1955)
Fanon, F. (2006). The wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press. (Original work published 1961)
Guha, R. (1997). Dominance without hegemony. History and power in colonial India. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Loomba, A. (1998). Colonialism/postcolonialism. London: Routledge.
Maddison, A. (2010). Statistics on world population, GDP and per capita GDP: 1–2008 AD. Retrieved September
22, 2010, from http://www.ggdc.net/MADDISON/Historical_Statistics/horizontalfile_02-2010.xls
Said, E. (1978). Orientalism. New York: Vintage.
Spivak, G. C. (1988). Can the subaltern speak? In C. Nelson, ed. & L. Grossberg (Eds.), Marxism and the
interpretation of culture pp. (pp. 271–313). London: Macmillan.
Entry Citation:
Böröcz, József, and Mahua Sarkar. "Colonialism." Encyclopedia of Global Studies. Ed. Helmut K. Anheier, Mark Juergensmeyer, and
Victor Faessel. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, 2012. 229-34. SAGE Reference Online. Web. 22 Mar. 2012.
© SAGE Publications, Inc.
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