Society and Social Sciences, General, Social Groups, Communities and Identities, Ethnic Studies / Ethnicity

Empire's Children: Race, Filiation, and Citizenship in the French Colonies
Hardback Published on: 16/03/2012
Price: £100
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Synopsis
Europe's imperial projects were often predicated on a series of legal and scientific distinctions that were frequently challenged by the reality of social and sexual interactions between the colonized and the colonizers.When Emmanuelle Saada discovered a 1928 decree defining the status of persons of mixed parentage born in French Indochina-the *métis*-she found not only a remarkable artifact of colonial rule, but a legal bombshell that introduced race into French law for the first time. The decree was the culmination of a decades-long effort to resolve the "métis question": the educational, social, and civil issues surrounding the mixed population. Operating at the intersection of history, anthropology, and law, *Empire's Children* reveals the unacknowledged but central role of race in the definition of French nationality.
Through extensive archival work in both France and Vietnam, and a close reading of primary and secondary material from the Pacific islands and sub-Saharan and North Africa, Saada has created in *Empire's Children* an original and compelling perspective on colonialism, law, race, and culture from the end of the nineteenth century until decolonization.
Publisher information
- Publisher: University of Chicago Press
- ISBN: 9780226733074
- Number of pages: 344
- Dimensions: 25 x 16 x 2 mm
- Weight: 567g
- Languages: English