Imperial Violence: the ‘Ethnic’ as a Component of the ‘Criminal’ Class in Victorian England |
| |
Authors: | Preeti Nijhar |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Centre for Comparative Criminal Justice, University of Wales, College Road, Bangor, North Wales, LL57 2DG, UK |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() This article seeks to identify how, and in what ways, the debate over ethnic identity acquired saliency during the different phases of black settlement in England, especially against the backcloth of the socio-cultural processes and the economics of colonialism. It outlines how the ‘other’ was constituted in different discourses, policies, and practices, and how these constructions were appropriated by the criminal justice agencies. Critically, ethnic identity as subordinate and ‘inferior’ was produced by many of the same mechanisms as was developed with regard to the indigenous ‘criminal’ class in Victorian England. Societal reaction, through criminal and civil statutes, established the identity of the ethnic minorities of early nineteenth century England, not just as subordinate strata, but also by a more complex process, as a variant of the newly emergent ‘criminal’ class. It is argued that, caught in the hub of empire, the ‘ayahs’, the ‘lascars’ and the domestic servants (See R. Visram, The Ayahs, Lascars and The Princes (London: Pluto).) in England’s ports found themselves reconstructed as part of the ‘criminal’ class and subsequently subjected to disciplinary measures of social control and surveillance. The author argues with regard to the indigenous population, conceptions of the threat of the non-Western crystallised around the same popular images of ‘savagery’ and of moral degeneracy, a process reinforced in imperial fiction. A desire to ‘civilise’ and improve the peculiar habits of the non-Western followed directly from indigenous precedent. |
| |
Keywords: | ‘ aliens’ critical ‘ race’ theory colonialism crimes of survival criminal law postcolonial theory the non-Western |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|