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Migration began with our origin as the human species and continues
today. Each chapter of world history features distinct types of
migration. The earliest migrations spread humans across the globe.
Over the centuries, as our cultures, societies, and technologies
evolved in different material environments, migrants conflicted,
merged, and cohabited with each other, creating, entering, and
leaving various city-states, kingdoms, empires, and nations. During
the early modern period, migrations reconnected the continents,
including through colonization and forced migrations of subject
peoples, while political concepts like "citizen" and "alien"
developed. In recent history, migrations changed their character as
nation-states and transnational unions sought in new ways to
control the peoples who migrated across their borders. This volume
will explore the process of migration chronologically and also at
several levels, from the illuminating example of the migration of a
individual community, to larger patterns of the collective
movements of major ethnic groups, to the more abstract study of the
processes of emigration, migration, and immigration. This book will
concentrate on substantial migrations covering long distances and
involving large numbers of people. It will intentionally balance
evidence from the now diverse people's of the world, for example,
by highlighting an exemplary migration for each of the six chapters
that highlights different trajectories and by keeping issues of
gender and socio-economic class salient wherever appropriate.
Further, as a major theme, the volume will consider how technology,
the environment, and various polities have historically shaped
human migration. Exciting new scholarship in the several fields
inherent in this topic make it a particularly valuable and timely
project. Each chapter will contain short individual examples, maps,
illustrations, and brief quotations from diverse types of primary
documents, all integrated with each other and analyzed engagingly
in the text.
People from India have been coming to Britain - risking their lives
in voyages across the 'Kala Pani' (Black waters) - since the
beginning of the seventeenth century. Their story has both grand
historical sweep and the intimate drama of individual lives. They
came as sailors, servants, wives, merchants, ambassadors and
scholars, sometimes for betterment or profit, sometimes for
adventure, and sometimes for justice. Occasionally, they became
famous, like the Bengali Muslim calling himself 'John Morgan', a
renowned animal trainer, or Sake Dean Mahomed (1759-1851),
'shampooing surgeon' to the Royal Family. Often they remained
anonymous. After the 'Indian Mutiny' of 1857, the South Asian
presence in Britain, more visible than before, was also more
sharply defined. 'Brown Victorians', now to be found in the docks
and factories, universities and theatres, law courts and hospitals
- and eventually Parliament - played an increasingly important role
in British life. Through two world wars and the independence of
India (and Pakistan), their importance grew further. From the
1950s, increased immigration swelled the numbers of South Asians in
Britain, who experienced both racism and economic hardship as they
strove to express their entrepreneurial spirit and assert their
religious identity. More recently still, growing radicalism among
British-Asian youth has led to new interest in the South-Asian
community, its spirit, heritage and achievements. The narrative is
chronologically structured, beginning in 1600 and coming up to the
present day. After an introduction outlining the major themes and
setting them in context, eight chapters examine key periods in
detail: 1) 'Earliest Asian Visitors andSettlers during the
Pre-colonial Period, c. 1600-1750s', 2) 'Asian Arrivals during
Early Colonialism, 1750s-1790s', 3) 'Widening and Deepening of the
South Asian Presence in Britain, 1790s-1830s', 4) 'South Asian
Settlers and Transient Networks and Communities in Britain,
1830s-1857' (all Michael Fisher), 5) 'Brown Victorians, 1857-1901',
6) 'From Empire to Decolonisation, 1901-1947' (Shompa Lahiri), 7)
'Migrating to the Mother Country: South Asian Settlement and the
Post-war boom 1947-80' and 8) 'Riding the storm of Thatcherism and
Re-inventing Lives and Aspirations' (Shinder Thandi).
Migration began with our origin as the human species and continues
today. Each chapter of world history features distinct types of
migration. The earliest migrations spread humans across the globe.
Over the centuries, as our cultures, societies, and technologies
evolved in different material environments, migrants conflicted,
merged, and cohabited with each other, creating, entering, and
leaving various city-states, kingdoms, empires, and nations. During
the early modern period, migrations reconnected the continents,
including through colonization and forced migrations of subject
peoples, while political concepts like "citizen" and "alien"
developed. In recent history, migrations changed their character as
nation-states and transnational unions sought in new ways to
control the peoples who migrated across their borders. This volume
will explore the process of migration chronologically and also at
several levels, from the illuminating example of the migration of a
individual community, to larger patterns of the collective
movements of major ethnic groups, to the more abstract study of the
processes of emigration, migration, and immigration. This book will
concentrate on substantial migrations covering long distances and
involving large numbers of people. It will intentionally balance
evidence from the now diverse people's of the world, for example,
by highlighting an exemplary migration for each of the six chapters
that highlights different trajectories and by keeping issues of
gender and socio-economic class salient wherever appropriate.
Further, as a major theme, the volume will consider how technology,
the environment, and various polities have historically shaped
human migration. Exciting new scholarship in the several fields
inherent in this topic make it a particularly valuable and timely
project. Each chapter will contain short individual examples, maps,
illustrations, and brief quotations from diverse types of primary
documents, all integrated with each other and analyzed engagingly
in the text.
The descendant of German and French Catholic mercenaries, a Scots
Presbyterian subaltern, and their secluded Indian wives, David
Ochterlony Dyce Sombre defied all classification in the North
Indian principality where he was raised. Add to these influences an
adoptive mother who began as a Muslim courtesan and rose to become
the Catholic ruler of a strategically-placed, cosmopolitan little
kingdom, which her foster son was destined to inherit, and you have
the origins of a fascinating life that reflects many of the
Romantic, political, and colonial trends of a century. As heir to
the throne, Sombre took great advantage of the sensuous pleasures
of privilege, but he lost his kingdom to the British and went into
exile in London with his very considerable fortune. Despite being
Indian and Catholic, Sombre married the daughter of an English
Protestant Viscount, who was a prominent defender of slavery.
Sombre bought himself election as a British MP but then was
expelled for corruption. His treatment of his aristocratic wife led
to his arrest and confinement as a Chancery lunatic. Fleeing to
France, Sombre spent years trying to reclaim his sanity and his
fortune from those among the British establishment who had done him
down. In this thrilling biography, Michael H. Fisher recovers
Sombre's strange story and the echoes of his case for modern
conceptions of race, privilege and empire.
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh contain one-fifth of humanity, are
home to many biodiversity hotspots, and are among the nations most
subject to climatic stresses. By surveying their environmental
history, we can gain major insights into the causes and
implications of the Indian subcontinent's current conditions. This
accessible new survey begins roughly 100 million years ago, when
continental drift moved India from the South Pole and across the
Indian Ocean, forming the Himalayan Mountains and creating
monsoons. Coverage continues to the twenty-first century, taking
readers beyond independence from colonial rule. The new nations of
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh have produced rising populations
and have stretched natural resources, even as they have become
increasingly engaged with climate change. To understand the
region's current and future pressing issues, Michael H. Fisher
argues that we must engage with the long and complex history of
interactions among its people, land, climate, flora, and fauna.
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh contain one-fifth of humanity, are
home to many biodiversity hotspots, and are among the nations most
subject to climatic stresses. By surveying their environmental
history, we can gain major insights into the causes and
implications of the Indian subcontinent's current conditions. This
accessible new survey begins roughly 100 million years ago, when
continental drift moved India from the South Pole and across the
Indian Ocean, forming the Himalayan Mountains and creating
monsoons. Coverage continues to the twenty-first century, taking
readers beyond independence from colonial rule. The new nations of
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh have produced rising populations
and have stretched natural resources, even as they have become
increasingly engaged with climate change. To understand the
region's current and future pressing issues, Michael H. Fisher
argues that we must engage with the long and complex history of
interactions among its people, land, climate, flora, and fauna.
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