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The colonial emergence of a statistical imaginary

journal contribution
posted on 2013-09-19, 00:00 authored by Tiffany ShellamTiffany Shellam, T Rowse
The colonial emergence of a statistical imaginary

History

Journal

Comparative studies in society and history

Volume

55

Issue

4

Pagination

922 - 954

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, England

ISSN

0010-4175

Language

eng

Notes

Intellectual networks linking humanitarians in Britain, Western Australia, and New Zealand in the 1850s and 1860s operationalized the concept of native “protection” by arguing contra demographic pessimists that native peoples could survive if their adaptation was thoughtfully managed. While the population-measurement capacities of the colonial governments of Western Australia and New Zealand were still weak, missionaries pioneered the gathering of the data that enabled humanitarians to objectify natives as populations. This paper focuses on Francis Dart Fenton (in New Zealand), Florence Nightingale (in Britain), and Rosendo Salvado (in Western Australia) in the 1850s and 1860s. Their belief in the necessity of population statistics manifests the practical convergence of colonial humanitarianism with public health perspectives and with “the statistical movement” that had become influential in Britain in the 1830s. We draw attention to the materialism and environmentalism of these three quantifiers of natives, and to how native peoples were represented as governable through knowledge of their physical needs and vulnerabilities.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Cambridge University Press

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