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题名British Colonial Ventures and Recruitment of the Chinese in Southeast Asia from the Late Seventeenth to the Early Nineteenth Centuries
作者
发表日期2022-01
会议名称New York Southeast Asia Network conference
会议录名称Empire Competition: Southeast Asia as a Site of Imperial Contestation: Conference Proceedings on Southeast Asia as a site of Imperial Contestation
会议录编者Amy Freedman; Joseph Tse-Hei Lee
ISBN9781935625650
页码36-60
会议日期April 2021
会议地点Pace University
出版地New York
出版者Pace University Press
摘要

Southeast Asia has long been a target for European maritime trade and seaborne expansion. During the early colonial period, private traders who served the British East India Company (EIC) and the Dutch East India Company (VOC) came from afar to search for Southeast Asian spices, and Chinese silks and porcelains. Due to the growing economic opportunities in the region, Chinese emigration to Southeast Asia increased rapidly in the eighteenth century. While Leonard Blussé and Tonio Andrade chronicled the increase of the Chinese population in and around pepper and sugar plantations in Dutch Java, the rise of the Chinese population in pepper plantations in British Malaya remains understudied. Why did the British need for Chinese labor in Southeast Asia increase during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries? How can we understand the connection between early British trade expeditions, migration patterns, and their colonial ambitions in Malaya? This chapter draws on surviving documents in the British EIC China Factory Records (G/12) to investigate the rise of Chinese settlements in pepper plantations in the Straits Settlements in Malaya. The British EIC records, mostly digitized, contain valuable information about the logistics of British colonial operations and labor recruitment before the nineteenth century, and the British views of the Dutch in their empire conquests. As important as the Dutch VOC sources in Frank Dhont's chapter, these English records are also pivotal in understanding the production and circulation of colonial knowledge for the procurement of pepper, and the systematic recruitment of Chinese laborers in Southeast Asia. This chapter contains three main parts. The starting point is the British quest for a foothold in Southeast Asia and their motivations. The analysis begins with a detailed discussion of Britain's need to gain better access to trade with China and the decisions that lead to the need to bolster supplies of pepper and other spices in Southeast Asia, which in turn was the major catalyst that led the British EIC to make use of Chinese laboring networks in Southeast Asia. The second part of the chapter draws on British colonial documents to examine what kinds of specific Chinese laboring skills the EIC was looking for in the late eighteenth century. The last part discusses the circulation of colonial representations that portrayed Malay natives as feudal and Chinese migrants as entrepreneurial in Southeast Asia. These stereotypes formed the underpinnings of the increases in the Chinese population in British Malaya.

 

语种英语English
文献类型会议论文
条目标识符https://repository.uic.edu.cn/handle/39GCC9TT/9476
专题通识教育学院--通识教育协调中心
作者单位
BNU-HKBU United International College
第一作者单位北师香港浸会大学
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Wong, Wei Chin. British Colonial Ventures and Recruitment of the Chinese in Southeast Asia from the Late Seventeenth to the Early Nineteenth Centuries[C]//Amy Freedman; Joseph Tse-Hei Lee. New York: Pace University Press, 2022: 36-60.
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