Perceptions of war, savagery and civilisation in Britain, 1801-1899
<p>This dissertation traces the complex ways in which non-European military cultures – often designated as 'savage' – and the expeditions undertaken against them – regularly conceptualised as 'savage warfare' – were understood in the Victorian imagination. It addresses how...
Main Author: | Hartwell, N |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Garnett, J |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2017
|
Subjects: |
Similar Items
-
Freud's Britain: Family, followers and the dissemination of ideas before and after the Great War
by: Willoughby, RT
Published: (2022) -
The Colonial Office and the plantation colonies, 1801-1834
by: Murray, D, et al.
Published: (1963) -
Did the Confinement of Boer Civilians in Concentration Camps by the British Army during the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902) Constitute an Act of Genocide?
by: Hector Ribeiro
Published: (2020-12-01) -
Great Britain in the Commonwealth of Nations
by: N. A. Stepanova
Published: (2014-08-01) -
Orthodoxy, heterodoxy, and reform: constructing an Islamic universe in the British official mind, 1860-1914
by: Meleady, C
Published: (2019)