Selective Memory: British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918

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Selective Memory : British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918. / Bomholt Nielsen, Mads.

I: Journal of Southern African Studies, Bind 43, Nr. 2, 02.2017, s. 315-330.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bomholt Nielsen, M 2017, 'Selective Memory: British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918', Journal of Southern African Studies, bind 43, nr. 2, s. 315-330. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843

APA

Bomholt Nielsen, M. (2017). Selective Memory: British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918. Journal of Southern African Studies, 43(2), 315-330. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843

Vancouver

Bomholt Nielsen M. Selective Memory: British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918. Journal of Southern African Studies. 2017 feb.;43(2):315-330. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843

Author

Bomholt Nielsen, Mads. / Selective Memory : British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918. I: Journal of Southern African Studies. 2017 ; Bind 43, Nr. 2. s. 315-330.

Bibtex

@article{dc27fbc5103a4f81b01f85f9d3629504,
title = "Selective Memory: British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918",
abstract = "This article examines British officials{\textquoteright} perceptions of, and degree of involvement in, the Herero–Nama war and subsequent genocide in German South-West Africa in 1904–1908. By examining contemporary British correspondence on this event and comparing it to the British {\textquoteleft}Blue Book{\textquoteright} of 1918, the article shows that British officials were far more interested in retaining stability than in the suffering of Africans in German territory at the time of the genocide. Nevertheless, by 1918 they used this event as an instrument to confiscate Germany{\textquoteright}s colonies. Being part of a wider transnational approach to German colonial history, this article challenges the idea of German colonial exceptionalism and the approach to this genocide within a historical framework of the Third Reich. Instead, this event should be understood within the wider transnational context of imperial history.",
author = "{Bomholt Nielsen}, Mads",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "315--330",
journal = "Journal of Southern African Studies",
issn = "0305-7070",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Selective Memory

T2 - British Perceptions of the Herero-Nama Genocide, 1904-1908 and 1918

AU - Bomholt Nielsen, Mads

PY - 2017/2

Y1 - 2017/2

N2 - This article examines British officials’ perceptions of, and degree of involvement in, the Herero–Nama war and subsequent genocide in German South-West Africa in 1904–1908. By examining contemporary British correspondence on this event and comparing it to the British ‘Blue Book’ of 1918, the article shows that British officials were far more interested in retaining stability than in the suffering of Africans in German territory at the time of the genocide. Nevertheless, by 1918 they used this event as an instrument to confiscate Germany’s colonies. Being part of a wider transnational approach to German colonial history, this article challenges the idea of German colonial exceptionalism and the approach to this genocide within a historical framework of the Third Reich. Instead, this event should be understood within the wider transnational context of imperial history.

AB - This article examines British officials’ perceptions of, and degree of involvement in, the Herero–Nama war and subsequent genocide in German South-West Africa in 1904–1908. By examining contemporary British correspondence on this event and comparing it to the British ‘Blue Book’ of 1918, the article shows that British officials were far more interested in retaining stability than in the suffering of Africans in German territory at the time of the genocide. Nevertheless, by 1918 they used this event as an instrument to confiscate Germany’s colonies. Being part of a wider transnational approach to German colonial history, this article challenges the idea of German colonial exceptionalism and the approach to this genocide within a historical framework of the Third Reich. Instead, this event should be understood within the wider transnational context of imperial history.

U2 - 10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843

DO - 10.1080/03057070.2017.1286843

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43

SP - 315

EP - 330

JO - Journal of Southern African Studies

JF - Journal of Southern African Studies

SN - 0305-7070

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 189450717