Tell your friends about this item:
Last Outpost on the Zulu Frontiers: Fort Napier and the British Imperial Garrison - History of Military Occupation
Graham Dominy
Last Outpost on the Zulu Frontiers: Fort Napier and the British Imperial Garrison - History of Military Occupation
Graham Dominy
Small and isolated in the Colony of Natal, Fort Napier was long treated like a temporary outpost of the expanding British Empire. Yet British troops manned this South African garrison for over seventy years. Tasked with protecting colonists, the fort became even more significant as an influence on, and reference point for, settler society. Graham Dominy's Last Outpost on the Zulu Frontier reveals the unexamined but pivotal role of Fort Napier in the peacetime public dramas of the colony. Its triumphalist colonial-themed pageantry belied colonists's worries about their own vulnerability. As Dominy shows, the cultural, political, and economic methods used by the garrison compensated for this perceived weakness. Settler elites married their daughters to soldiers to create and preserve an English-speaking oligarchy. At the same time, garrison troops formed the backbone of a consumer market that allowed colonists to form banking and property interests that consolidated their control.
296 pages, 22 black and white photographs, 3 maps, 1 table
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | March 24, 2016 |
ISBN13 | 9780252040047 |
Publishers | University of Illinois Press |
Pages | 320 |
Dimensions | 159 × 236 × 28 mm · 666 g |
See all of Graham Dominy ( e.g. Hardcover Book and Paperback Book )