1. The savagery of empire – Matthew P. Fitzpatrick and Peter
Monteath
2. ‘No alternative to extermination’: Germans and their ‘savages’
in Southern Brazil at the turn of the nineteenth century – Stefan
Rinke
3. ‘Far better than their reputation’: the Tolai of East New
Britain in the writings of Otto Finsch – Hilary Howes
4. The goddess and the beast: African–German encounters – Eva
Bischoff
5. Wine into wineskins: the Neuendettelsau missionaries’ encounter
with language and myth in New Guinea – Daniel Midena
6. Signs of the savage in the skull? German investigations of
Australian Aboriginal skeletal remains, c. 1860 – Antje Kühnast
7. ‘Scientific tourism’: colonialism in the photographs and letters
of the young cosmopolitan Carl Heinrich Becker, 1900–02 – Ulf
Morgenstern
8. Through a German lens: the Australian Aborigines and the
question of difference – Judith Wilson
9. The savagery of America? Nineteenth-century German literature
and indigenous representations – Nicole Perry
10. Incompetent masters, indolent natives, savage origins: the
Philippines and its inhabitants in the travel accounts of Carl
Semper (1869) and Fedor Jagor (1873) – Hidde van der Wall
11. Social Democrats and Germany’s war in South-West Africa,
1904–07: the view of the socialist press – Andrew G. Bonnell
Index
Matthew P Fitzpatrick is Associate Professor of International
History at Flinders University, Adelaide
Peter Monteath is Professor of History at Flinders University,
Adelaide
Ask a Question About this Product More... |