While European commerce in race was substantial, the colonial
trade in ideas of race was highly profitable as well. Looking at
official propaganda and commercial representations in France during
the Third Republic, this book explores the way the French increased
the value of their racial identity at home at the expense of their
colonized brothers and sisters. The French did not create the
identity-effacing stereotypes of Africans, Arabs, and Indochinese.
Instead they refined or remolded these images, and as they did so
they redefined and remolded their images of themselves. Focusing on
world s fairs, colonial expositions, and mundane manufacturers
trademarks, Races on Display shows not only the prevalence of
racial stereotypes, but also how complex these representations
prove to be."
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