Archive for Colonialism

Bosnia-Hercegovina under Habsburg rule, 1878-1918

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on 11 January 2012 by delclem

“With the arrival of Habsburg occupiers in 1878, Bosnia-Herzegovina became Austria-Hungary’s first and only colony. It rapidly became the sole outlet for the energies, ideas, and resources of aspiring colonizers in the ‘motherland’.”

Pretty good “Postcolonial” historical survey reblogged from (c) bosniafacts.info, 2012

Photo (c) Heeresgeschichtl. Museum, Vienna

Also see my own posting on the subject matter.

Habsburg, postcolonial

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on 17 April 2011 by delclem

> GERMAN VERSION
The idea is not really new. ‘Postcolonial approaches’ to the late Habsburg Monarchy are already to be found in Robert Musil’s famous novel Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften (“The Man Without Qualities”), and we can find instances of such a view with other contemporary observers as well, such as the Viennese art historian Hilde Zaloscer. Born in 1903 to a middle class, German-speaking Jewish family in Banja Luka, Bosnia, Zaloscer and her family fled to Vienna after the First World War, and then, in 1938, further to Alexandria, Egypt.

In her autobiography entitled Eine Heimkehr gibt es nicht (“There’s No Coming Home,” Vienna 1988), she repeatedly compares her “happy childhood days […] ‘on a volcano’”* with her Egyptian exile which at the time was de facto still under colonial rule:

“Basically it was the same constellation as in Bosnia before the First World War. There, too, a foreign ethnic group – in this case, the Austrians – in a country appropriated through violence, kept the people at an educationally inferior level by means of skillful politics.” (p. 129)* Continue reading

Mario Vargas Llosa on (Sir) Roger Casement

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , on 18 October 2010 by delclem

In his novel El sueño del celta (“The Dream of the Celt”), the Peruvian Nobel winner Vargas Llosa finds perfect protagonist in the gay British consul and later Irish rebel, the agent and later crown witness of Belgian & British colonialism.

Article (c) The Guardian, 2010