Thèses sur le sujet « Germany – Colonies – Africa, East »
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Unangst, Matthew David. « Building the Colonial Border Imaginary : German Colonialism, Race, and Space in East Africa, 1884-1895 ». Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2015. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/365905.
Texte intégralPh.D.
The dissertation explores the intellectual history of the interconnection of European and African ideas about race and space in 19th-century European imperialism. I examine German colonial geographies of East Africa, meaning not only cartography, but the new discipline of human geography, which studies the relationship between people and their environment. Germans and East Africans together produced a hybrid geography that combined precolonial conceptions of race and space and race from both Europe and Africa, and race explicitly entered German governance for the first time. By analyzing changes in how both Germans and East Africans imagined geographical relationships, I argue, we can better understand the ways in which they developed new conceptions of themselves and the world at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. The project traces the history of German racial thinking to a specific, earlier colonial context than other scholars have argued. It also brings a spatial dimension to studies of the colonial state in Africa in order to understand the ways in which spaces have become imbued with racial and ethnic meaning over the last century and a half.
Temple University--Theses
Pizzo, David Browning Christopher R. « To devour the land of Mkwawa colonial violence and the German-Hehe War in East Africa, c.1884-1914 / ». Chapel Hill, N.C. : University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2008. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/etd,1645.
Texte intégralTitle from electronic title page (viewed Sep. 16, 2008). "... in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History." Discipline: History; Department/School: History.
Von, Herff Michael. « "They walk through the fire like the blondest German" : African soldiers serving the Kaiser in German East Africa (1888-1914) ». Thesis, McGill University, 1991. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=60565.
Texte intégralThe relationship between the African soldiers and their German employers yielded military successes for the new colonial government and, by extension, an enhanced status for the soldiers themselves. Over time, the Africans within the Schutztruppe distanced themselves from other Africans in the colony and began to develop separate communities at the government stations, which in turn fostered the growth of an askari group identity. The interests of these communities became inextricably linked to the German presence in the region. The development of this relationship helps to explain the askaris' support of the German campaign against the British during the First World War.
Nasar, Saima. « Subjects, citizens and refugees : the making and re-making of Britain's East African Asians ». Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2016. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/6685/.
Texte intégralWimmelbücker, Ludger. « Der Bericht des Mzee bin Ramadhani über den Maji-Maji-Krieg im Bezirk Songea ». Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2012. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-91287.
Texte intégralRanne, Katriina. « Heavenly drops ». Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2012. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-90863.
Texte intégralRanne, Katriina. « Heavenly drops : the image of water in traditional Islamic Swahili poetry ». Swahili Forum 17 (2010), S. 58-81, 2010. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A11479.
Texte intégralRuano, de la Haza Jonathan. « The Rise of the United States' Airfield Empire in Latin America, North Africa, the Middle East, and Southern Asia (1927-1945). How America's Political Leaders Achieved Mastery over the Global Commons and Created the "American Century" ». Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23557.
Texte intégralVolk, Anette. « Archivbestände zu Tansania in der Benediktiner- Erzabtei St. Ottilien ». Universität Leipzig, 2002. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A34430.
Texte intégralHASCHEMI, YEKANI Minu. « Die (Un-)Erwünschten : Rassismus, Arbeit und koloniale Ordnung an der Küste Tansanias, 1885-1914 ». Doctoral thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/37646.
Texte intégralExamining Board: Prof. Dr. Sebastian Conrad, Freie Universität Berlin (EUI); Prof. Dr. Andreas Eckert, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin (External supervisor); Prof. Dr. Ulrike Lindner, Universität zu Köln (External supervisor); Prof. Dr. Dirk Moses, European University Institute.
The central question posed in this project is: In what way did the colonial labor regime in German East Africa correspond with the formation of a global color line and the growing debates over the relationship between race and labor at the end of the nineteenth century? The division between ‘wanted’ and ‘unwanted’ subalterns made by colonial rulers is the topic around which this project is structured. By examining three case studies, this project highlights the emergence of a colonial labor order in early colonial Tanzania. In doing so, it shows the discursive entanglements that bound local processes to global, transregional, inter-imperial, and metropolitan phenomena. The first chapter focuses on the recruitment and employment of Asian indentured laborers on plantations owned by the German-East African Plantation Company, and so raises questions regarding global migration as well as free and unfree labor during High Imperialism. The second chapter contextualizes the “education of the Negro to work” as a result of a transatlantic knowledge exchange and ties this process to the question of school policy in colonial Tanzania. The chapter then goes on to analyze the recruitment policy of state-run schools in which Muslims, first and foremost, were to be trained as subaltern civil servants. The third chapter in turn focuses on unwanted subalterns and contextualizes the deportation of poor whites who were seen as a danger to both the colonial (labor) regime, as well as to the “white prestige” of colonial rulers. The project will demonstrate that this was a broader problem and that the legislative solution ultimately reached in German East Africa has to be analyzed within the context of imperial border regimes.
NATERMANN, Diana M. « Pursuing whiteness in the colonies private memories from the Congo Free State and German East Africa (1884-1914) ». Doctoral thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/37645.
Texte intégralExamining Board: Prof Dirk Moses, EUI (Supervisor); Prof Jorge Flores, EUI; Prof Elizabeth Buettner, University of Amsterdam; Prof Corinna Unger, Jacobs University Bremen.
Pursuing Whiteness in the Colonies offers a new comprehension of colonial history from below by taking a profound look at remnants of individual agencies from a whiteness studies perspective. It highlights the experiences and perceptions of colonisers and how they portrayed their identities and re-interpreted their lives in Africa. My transcolonial approach is based on egodocuments – texts and photographs – produced by Belgian, German, and Swedish men and women who migrated to Central Africa for reasons varying from a love for adventure, social betterment, new gender roles, or the conviction that colonising was their patriotic duty. My analysis shows how the colonials continuously constructed their whiteness in relation to the subaltern in everyday situations connected to friendship, gender issues, and food. Colonisers were more likely to befriend the higher educated Muslim Afro-Arab traders than indigenous Africans. Alternatively, some colonisers preferred dogs as friends to colonial subalterns. Pedigree dogs were status symbols and tools for racial segregation. Furthermore, ever-changing gender roles influenced Europeans to leave their homelands. Especially the single men wished to re-enforce more traditional ideas of masculinity in the new territories and most of the European women went there in search for feminist liberties. Frequently, however, a bourgeois understanding of Western civilisation was practiced to maintain and to enhance the picture of the superior white colonial, for instance, by upholding a European dining culture. The notion of ‘breaking bread’ together was substituted with a white dining culture that reinforced white identity thereby creating yet another line of separation between white and non-white. Overall, these individuals developed new roles, reacted to foreign challenges, and shaped their lives as imperial agents in sub-Saharan Africa. By combining colonial history with whiteness studies in an African setting I provide a different understanding of imperial realities as they were experienced by European colonisers in situ.
MASS, Sandra. « Weisse Helden, schwarze Krieger : zur Geschichte einer kolonialen Imagination, 1918-1964 ». Doctoral thesis, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5898.
Texte intégralExamining board: Prof. Richard Bessel, University of York ; Prof. Regina Schulte, Ruhr-Universität Bochum/European University Institute, Florence ; Prof. Bo Stråth, European University Institute, Florence ; Prof. Bernd Weisbrod, Universität Göttingen
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
Mann, Erick J. « The Schutztruppe and the nature of colonial warfare in German East Africa during the coastal revolt of 1889-1891 ». 1994. http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/11449.
Texte intégralSTORNIG, Katharina. « 'All for the greater glory of Jesus and the salvation of the immortal souls!' : German missionary nuns in colonial Togo and New Guinea, 1897-1960 ». Doctoral thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/14987.
Texte intégralExamining Board: Prof. Giulia Calvi (EUI) – Supervisor; Prof. Steve Smith (EUI); Prof. Edith Saurer (Universität Wien); Prof. Rebekka Habermas (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digital archive of EUI PhD theses
This thesis, a feminist history of mission in the context of gender, has started on the premise to develop an alternative perspective on the missionary encounter rather than the attempt to enrich existing narratives by adding women. Therefore, it mainly draws on the sources that its principal subjects, western missionary nuns, produced. These are mostly correspondence with Europe, travelogues, chronicles, reports and, to a lesser extent, articles, photographs and memoirs, all of which allow us to gain new insights into the nuns’ religious and practical worlds and their gendered dimensions as they moved within and across imperial and religious systems. In addition, it uses colonial records and ecclesiastical sources in order to scrutinize the power relations that structured the nuns’ missionary engagement and their ambiguous roles as enthusiastic missionaries that took their privileged position as 'white Christians' for granted on the one hand and subordinated to male religious and secular power on the other one. Ultimately, theological perspectives are accorded a prominent place because, to borrow from Andrew Porter, missionaries 'viewed their world first of all with the eye of faith and then through theological lenses'.
Ohff, Hans-Jürgen. « Empires of enterprise German and English commercial interests in East New Guinea 1884 to 1914 / ». 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/48479.
Texte intégralThesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of History and Politics, 2008
Schubert, Anette. « Stressmanagement : eine besondere Herausforderung für interkulturelle Mitarbeiter : eine qualitative Studie zur Stressbewältigung von deutschen christlichen Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeitern in Übersee ». Diss., 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22662.
Texte intégralViel Stress und mangelnde Stressbewältigung beeinflussen das gesamte Leben von interkulturellen Mitarbeitern, wie Gesundheit, geistliches Leben, Arbeitsleistung und Beziehungen. Langjährige und umfangreiche Information über Stress und Stressbewältigung zeigte nur wenig positive Veränderung. Diese Untersuchung beschreibt und reflektiert das Erleben und den Umgang mit Stress interkultureller Mitarbeiter, um eine Grundlage für bessere Möglichkeiten zum Stressmanagement im interkulturellen Kontext zu schaffen und damit authentisches geistliches Leben zu fördern. Ziel dieser Studie ist es, aufzuzeigen, wie die Pastoraltherapie interkulturelle Mitarbeiter in ihrem Stressmanagement unterstützen kann. Die Untersuchung über Stress und Stressmanagement von christlichen Mitarbeitern im interkulturellen Kontext soll interkulturelle Mitarbeiter, ihre sendenden Organisationen und Seelsorger informieren und eine Grundlage für Workshops und pastoral-therapeutische Gespräche über Stressmanagement werden. Diese Arbeit zeigt auf, dass Pastoraltherapie einen wichtigen Beitrag in der Verbesserung der Stressbewältigung von christlichen interkulturellen Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeitern leisten kann.
Cross-cultural workers often experience very stressful conditions yet often lack appropriate coping mechanisms. Too much stress over a long period of time influences every aspect of life, like health, spiritual life, work performance and relationships. Continuous and extensive information about stress and stress management have not brought the desired changes. This research analyses stressful conditions and stress management strategies of intercultural workers in order to show the reasons for this lack of stress management. The outcome of this research will be used as a foundation to help intercultural workers to find ways how to manage their stress more effectively and to foster authentic spiritual life.The goal of this study is to highlight how pastoral therapy can support intercultural workers in their stress management. This research will show that pastoral therapy can make a significant contribution to improve stress management for Christian cross-cultural workers.
Practical Theology
M.Th. (Practical Theology (Pastoral Therapy))