E N D
1. Colonialism vs. Neo-Colonialism The 16th century vs. the 19th century
2. Who? Colonialism
The extension of a nation's sovereignty over territory beyond its borders
Created little copies of the “mother” society that would be partners or equals to the mother society.
Portugal
Spain
Britain
France
Netherlands Neo-Colonialism
A form of economic imperialism where powerful nations strove to dominate less powerful regions. Only France held the belief of making these regions equal to herself.
Britain
France
Germany
Belgium
Russia
Italy
Netherlands
Japan
United States
Spain
Portugal
3. When? Colonialism
1450 to the Industrial Revolution Neo-Colonialism
Industrial Revolution to mid 20th century
4. Where? Colonialism
North America
Caribbean
South America
Coastal cities of India
Coastal cities of Africa
Spice Islands (Indonesia)
Neo-Colonialism
Africa
South Asia
China
West Asia
Pacific Islands
Australia
Caribbean
5. Why? Colonialism
Gold
God
Glory
Mercantilism
Bypass Muslim traders Neo-Colonialism
Markets
Raw materials
National pride
Capitalism
Refueling bases (coal)
Fertile lands
6. “We must find new lands from which we can easily obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit the cheap slave labor that is available from the natives of the colonies. The colonies would also provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods produced in our factories.”
Cecil Rhodes
8. How? Colonialism
Exploration & discovery
Conquest
Treaty of Tordesillas
Sailing technology
Trading companies Neo-Colonialism
Trading companies
Nationalism
Steamship and Railroad Technology
Cheap goods
Suez Canal
Monroe Doctrine
Panama Canal
Unequal treaties
quinine
9. Gatling Gun & Maxim Gun
10. Let’s get it straight! Colonialism – A process by which a group of people in one country is subject to the authority of the people of another country
Neocolonialism – A process by which rich, powerful states use economic, political, or other informal means to exert pressure on poor, less-powerful underdeveloped states
11. … but there’s more! Neoneocolonialsm !!!! - A process by which multinational and transnational corporations, with or without the aid of rich & powerful Western states, use direct or indirect means to dominate non-Western states politically, socially, economically, & culturally
13. from the Review of Reviews in 1899:
The continent of Africa is shared out at last—at least on paper. Future generations will smile at the glee with which serious statesmen risked war and the wreck of civilisation in order to increase the area of the African map over which their country’s influence is recognised as supreme. For the partition is a mapmaker’s partition, about as practical as the famous partition by which a pope, on a map still visible in the museum of the Propaganda at Rome, divided the whole of the New World between Portugal and Spain. That was only four hundred years ago, and to-day neither Portugal nor Spain exercises sovereignty over a single acre of the New World. So it will be with Africa. The geographers who on Afric’s downs put elephants instead of towns, were hardly more unprofitably employed than those political geographers who are carefully painting great stretches of African sand or African forest French, British, or German, as the case may be. The agreement happily arrived at between M. Cambon and Lord Salisbury as to the limits of our respective spheres of influence in Northern Africa finally divides up the whole map. Tripoli and Morocco alone remain to be scrambled for. They are the only fragments of the African plum cake yet unappropriated—on the map.
14. Published on 28 November 1906 in Punch Magazine, England
16. Chicago Tribune, 24 August 1898
18. Cartoon produced by a British newspaper to depict the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya 1952 – 1960