Table of Contents
Introduction Manfred Berg and
Simon Wendt Chapter 1. The Racialization of the Globe: Historical Perspectives Frank Dikötter
Chapter 2. How Racism Arose in Europe and Why It Did Not in the Near East Benjamin Braude
Chapter 3. Culture's Shadow: “Race” and Postnational Belonging in the Twentieth Century Christian Geulen
Chapter 4. Racism and Genocide Boris Barth
Chapter 5. Slavery and Racism in Nineteenth-Century Cuba Michael Zeuske
Chapter 6. Towards a Transnational History of Racism: Wilhelm Marr and the Interrelationships between Colonial Racism and German Anti-Semitism Claudia Bruns
Chapter 7. Transatlantic Anthropological Dialogue and “the other”: Felix von Luschan’s Research in America, 1914–1915 John David Smith
Chapter 8. Transits of Race: Empire and Difference in Philippine-American Colonial History Paul A. Kramer
Chapter 9. Interrogating Caste and Race in South Asia Gita Dharampal-Frick and Katja Götzen
Chapter 10. The Making of a “Ruling Race”: Defining and Defending Whiteness in Colonial India Harald Fischer-Tiné
Chapter 11. Glocalising “Race” in China: Concepts and Contingencies a the Turn of the Twentieth Century Gotelind Müller-Saini
Chapter 12. Race without Supremacy: On Racism in the Political Discourse of Late Meiji Japan, 1890–1912 Urs Zachmann
Chapter 13. Hendrik Verwoerd’s Long March to Apartheid: Nationalism and Racism in South Africa Christoph Marx
Chapter 14. The “Right Kind of White People”: Reproducing Whiteness in the United States and Australia, 1780s–1930s Gregory D. Smithers
Chapter 15. Race and Indigeneity in Contemporary Australia A. Dirk Moses
Notes on Contributors Selected Bibliography